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Free queen-size bed CAD blocks for AutoCAD

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By Sumana Kumar · Published 20 Sept 2025 · Updated 26 Apr 2026

A queen-size bed is the workhorse of residential design: bigger than a double, smaller than a king, and the size most main bedrooms are actually built around. This page offers free queen-size bed CAD blocks in DWG and DXF, drawn at true millimetre dimensions and ready to insert into AutoCAD 2004 or later. The plan view shows the mattress, headboard and pillows so the bed reads clearly and the circulation around it can be checked at once.

Queen-size sits in the sweet spot between the compact double and the wide king, which is why it is the default main-bed for apartments, mid-range hotel rooms and family homes. Choosing a queen rather than a king often buys back the side gaps and the wardrobe access a tight room needs. Every file here is free for personal and commercial work, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution required.

What a queen-size bed block includes

The queen block is drawn as a clear plan-view bed: the mattress outline, a headboard against the wall, and pillows with a turned cover so the head of the bed is obvious. That orientation is what tells the plan which wall the bed backs onto and which way a sleeper faces, and it makes the block immediately readable on a furnished floor plan.

The geometry is built on sensible layers, so the mattress, the headboard and the soft-furnishing detail can be separated. You can simplify the bed to a plain rectangle for a structural or services drawing, then bring back the pillows and throw for a presentation plan — the same block serves both without redrawing.

Typical queen-size dimensions to design around

Keep these reference figures handy. A queen mattress is commonly around 1500–1600 mm wide by 2000 mm long, sitting between the roughly 1350–1400 mm double and the wider king. With the frame and headboard the overall bed footprint grows to about 1650–1750 mm wide by 2050–2100 mm deep.

For circulation, allow 700–750 mm of clear floor down each side a sleeper uses, and 900 mm where a side doubles as the route past the bed; keep around 900 mm clear at the foot. A queen comfortably suits a main bedroom roughly 3.0–3.5 m wide with a bedside table and a walking gap each side, which is exactly why it is the default choice where a king would over-fill the room. The scaled block makes that fit obvious the moment it lands.

Queen vs double and king: which block to place

Getting the bed size right is the single biggest decision in a bedroom layout, and the queen is the most common right answer for a main bedroom. A double is narrower and best kept for guest rooms and children's rooms where floor space is tight; a king is wider and reserved for generous master suites; the queen sits between them and fits the broadest range of rooms.

When you are space-planning a scheme with several bedroom types, insert the dedicated queen block for the main bedrooms and double blocks for the secondary ones rather than stretching a single bed up and down — scaling distorts the pillows and headboard. Each size block lands at true scale, so the whole bedroom set stays dimensionally honest across the plan.

How to insert and orient the queen 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 automatically on insertion. Run INSERT or drag the DWG from a tool palette, pick an insertion point at the centre of the headboard, and rotate so the headboard meets the chosen wall.

Because the bed is a single block reference you can mirror a whole bedroom in one move to flip a unit's handing, and a later edit to the block definition updates every instance. Keep the bed on a dedicated furniture layer rather than layer 0, so the furnishings can be frozen for a structural plan and thawed for a furnished one.

Where queen-size blocks are used

Queen-size bed blocks populate the bulk of residential and hospitality bedroom drawings: apartment and house plans, mid-range hotel and motel rooms, serviced apartments, holiday lets and guest bedrooms. Architects use them to confirm a main bedroom works with proper circulation before partitions are fixed. Interior designers use them to test how the bed, bedside tables and wardrobe share the room. Property marketers use them for furnished sales plans that read clearly to a buyer.

Pair the queen block with the bedside-table, wardrobe and dressing-table blocks in the bedroom category to assemble a complete furniture layer, and reuse the same block from concept sketch through to a coordinated FF&E drawing.

Laying out a main bedroom around the queen

Place the queen bed first and snap the headboard to the wall, because the rest of the room arranges around it. Drop a bedside table to each side and confirm both still clear the door swing, then set the wardrobe along the longest free wall and check its doors against the foot of the bed. A queen typically leaves enough room for this arrangement where a king would not, which is the practical reason it is so widely specified.

When the layout reads well, you can WBLOCK the bed with its bedside tables as a reusable unit and array it across a row of identical hotel or apartment bedrooms. Tagging the bed with a room-type attribute lets you extract a furniture schedule from the drawing, giving FF&E and procurement an accurate count without any extra drafting.

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Questions

Frequently asked

How big is a queen-size bed CAD block?+

A queen mattress is typically around 1500–1600 mm wide by 2000 mm long, and the overall bed footprint with frame and headboard is roughly 1650–1750 mm wide by 2050–2100 mm deep — between a double and a king.

Is a queen bed the right size for a main bedroom?+

Usually, yes. A queen suits a main bedroom of about 3.0–3.5 m wide with a bedside table and a walking gap each side, which is why it is the default main-bed where a king would over-fill the room. Drop the scaled block in to confirm the fit.

Are the queen-size bed blocks free to use commercially?+

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

What units are the queen-size blocks drawn in?+

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

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