Two-bedroom apartment floor plan: size, layout & how to measure it

55–95 m²
typical internal floor area
2 bedrooms
layout

The workhorse of rental and family housing worldwide at roughly 55–95 m². Two bedrooms plus a living zone means more internal walls — and skirting runs that are easy to under-count from a glance at the plan.

What the layout looks like

Common variants: both bedrooms off a short corridor, or a split layout with bedrooms on opposite sides of the living space. The corridor is the classic quoting trap — it belongs to the flooring area but is often skipped when people sum room-by-room from the marketing brochure.

Measuring it accurately

The reliable way to measure any 2-bedroom plan is off the drawing itself: calibrate against a printed dimension line, then trace each room along the inside face of the walls. Fold hallways into the room they flow from (usually the living area) rather than leaving them unclaimed — the polygons should tile the whole internal floor with nothing left over.

PlanTape does the tracing for you — AI detects every labelled room and the scale line in under two minutes, you fine-tune the corners, and the per-room areas and skirting perimeters export as a CSV.

Measure your 2-bedroom plan now
Free to try — upload the PDF and watch the rooms appear.
Try PlanTape free

Common questions

How big is a two-bedroom apartment?

Typically 55–95 m² of internal floor area, with 2 bedrooms. Exact size varies by launch year and block type — the floor plan for your specific unit is the only reliable source.

How do I measure a two-bedroom apartment floor plan for a flooring quote?

Upload the floor plan PDF to PlanTape: AI traces each room along the inside face of the walls and calibrates scale from a printed dimension. Fold hallways into the room they flow from (usually the living area) rather than leaving them unclaimed — the polygons should tile the whole internal floor with nothing left over. Then export per-room areas and perimeters as CSV.

What should I watch out for on 2-bedroom plans?

Common variants: both bedrooms off a short corridor, or a split layout with bedrooms on opposite sides of the living space. The corridor is the classic quoting trap — it belongs to the flooring area but is often skipped when people sum room-by-room from the marketing brochure.

Other home types

Studio1-bedroom3-bedroomTownhouseHouseCondo