cadblockdwg

Block landing · king size bed cad block

Free king-size bed CAD blocks for AutoCAD

DWGDXFFree1,200 words

By Sumana Kumar · Published 2 Apr 2025 · Updated 21 Jun 2025

A king-size bed is the centrepiece of a master suite, and because it is one of the largest single pieces of furniture in a home, getting its footprint right early stops a master bedroom from feeling cramped. This page offers free king-size bed CAD blocks in DWG and DXF, drawn at true millimetre dimensions and ready to insert into AutoCAD 2004 or later. The featured block is a 3200 × 2095 mm king-size bed — a generous setting that includes the bed, its headboard and the flanking bedside tables as a single composed group.

King-size is the large two-person bed above standard double and queen, and the extra width changes the room: it eats into the circulation, it demands a longer headboard wall, and it usually wants matching bedside tables that the layout has to accommodate. Every file here is free for personal and commercial use, with no signup, no watermark and no credit required.

What's in the king-size bed block

The king-size block is drawn as a composed bedroom setting rather than a bare mattress. In plan you get the king mattress with pillows and a turned cover, a wide headboard against the wall, and a bedside table to each side — the 3200 mm overall width across the group is what you actually plan the room around, not just the mattress alone. That makes the block immediately useful for laying out a master suite, because the bedside tables that almost always accompany a king bed are already in place.

The geometry sits on sensible layers so the mattress, the headboard and the side tables can be separated. You can strip the block back to the bed alone for a tight room, or keep the full setting for a presentation plan, without redrawing anything.

Typical king-size dimensions to design around

Keep these reference figures close. A king mattress is commonly around 1500–1800 mm wide by 2000 mm long depending on the regional standard, and with the frame and a substantial headboard the bed footprint grows accordingly. The composed block here spans 3200 mm wide once the bedside tables to each side are counted, and 2095 mm deep including the headboard — that full envelope is the number that decides whether the room works.

For circulation, a king-size layout really wants 750–900 mm of clear floor down each side and at least 900–1000 mm at the foot, so the bed does not dominate the route to the en-suite or wardrobe. A master bedroom around 3.5–4.0 m wide comfortably takes a king with bedside tables and a walking gap each side; anything tighter and you start trading the side tables or a side gap. The scaled block makes that trade-off visible instantly.

King vs queen vs double: choosing the right block

The three two-person bed sizes are easy to mix up in a drawing, and using the wrong one quietly breaks the layout. A double is the compact two-person bed for guest rooms and smaller bedrooms; a queen is the mid-size step up that suits most main bedrooms; a king is the wide bed for generous master suites. Because each one has a different width, the gap each side and the headboard wall length change with the choice.

If you are space-planning a scheme with several bedroom types, set up the right size block for each room rather than scaling one bed up and down — scaling a double to king width also stretches the pillows and headboard out of proportion. Insert the dedicated king block for the master and the double or queen blocks for the secondary bedrooms, and the whole set reads correctly at true scale.

How to insert and place the king block

The block is drawn full size in millimetres. Insert at scale 1 in a millimetre drawing, 0.001 in a metre drawing, or set INSUNITS to millimetres so AutoCAD rescales it on insertion. Run INSERT (or drag the DWG onto the drawing), pick an insertion point — the centre of the headboard wall is a natural handle for a bed — and rotate so the headboard sits against the chosen wall.

Because the bed, headboard and bedside tables come in as one block reference, you can mirror the whole master-suite arrangement in a single move to suit a left- or right-handed room. Keep the bed on a dedicated furniture layer so you can freeze the furnishings for a structural plan and thaw them for a furnished one, and explode the block only if you genuinely need to edit an individual side table in place.

Where king-size blocks are used

King-size bed blocks belong in master-suite layouts, luxury apartment plans, hotel and resort guest rooms, show homes and high-end residential schemes. Architects use them to confirm a master bedroom can take a king with proper circulation before the partitions are fixed. Interior designers use the composed setting to present a furnished master suite to a client. Hospitality designers array the same king-room block down a corridor of identical premium rooms.

Pair the king-size block with the wardrobe, dressing-table and bench blocks in the bedroom category to fit out a full master suite, and use the same block to drive both the architectural plan and an FF&E count for the rooms.

Planning a master suite around the king bed

Place the king block first, because in a master suite the bed dictates everything else. Centre it on the longest uninterrupted wall, then check the clear floor down each side and at the foot against the figures above. Add the wardrobe run or walk-in entry, a dressing table near natural light, and confirm none of their door swings or pull-out drawers clash with the side tables that come with the bed.

Once the arrangement holds, the same block supports the later drawing stages: a side-elevation bed lets a joiner detail a panelled headboard feature wall, and tagging the room with an attribute lets you schedule the premium bedrooms separately from the standard ones. For a hotel, WBLOCK the finished king room and array it — the bed, tables and headboard repeat as one coordinated unit room after room.

Free download

Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.

Download CAD blocks

Questions

Frequently asked

How big is the king-size bed block on this page?+

The featured block is a composed setting measuring 3200 mm wide by 2095 mm deep, which includes the king mattress, the headboard and a bedside table to each side — that full group footprint is what you plan the master bedroom around.

What's the difference between a king and a double bed block?+

A king is the wide bed for generous master suites, while a double is the compact two-person bed for guest and smaller bedrooms. The king has a wider footprint and longer headboard wall, so use the dedicated king block rather than scaling a double up.

Are the king-size bed blocks free for commercial projects?+

Yes. The blocks download free in DWG and, where available, DXF with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, and they are cleared for commercial use.

What scale are the king-size blocks drawn at?+

Full size in millimetres. Insert at scale 1 in a millimetre drawing, or set INSUNITS to millimetres so AutoCAD rescales the bed automatically if your template uses different units.

Related downloads

Blocks for this guide

Popular blocks to download

Related categories

Related guides