Moroccan Area Rug — Sizing, Tradition, and Where Each Fits
An 'area rug' simply means a rug intended to define a specific zone within a larger room — a conversation area in a living room, a dining table footprint, the foot of a bed. Moroccan area rugs cover the full range of dimensions, from 3×5 ft accent pieces through 12×15 ft architectural-scale anchors. What distinguishes them from generic 'area rugs' is the construction: hand-knotted wool by Amazigh women in the Atlas Mountains, using traditions and techniques that predate machine production by centuries. The result is a category of area rug that lasts 30–50+ years rather than 3–7, and that appreciates rather than depreciates over time.
Sizing a Moroccan Area Rug
The classical rule: front legs of furniture should rest on the rug. For a standard 86-inch sofa with side chairs and a coffee table, the rug should extend at least 12 inches past either end of the seating arrangement. This typically means 8×10 minimum for American-spec living rooms, 9×12 for open-plan rooms, 10×14 for great rooms.
Dining room: rug extends 24+ inches past each end of the dining table — chairs stay on the rug when pushed back to seat. Six-seat table: 6×9 or 8×10. Eight-seat table: 9×12. Ten-seat: 10×14.
Bedroom: rug at foot of bed extending past either side by 18+ inches. Queen bed: 5×7 or 6×9. King bed: 6×9 or 8×10. Or place the entire bed on a 9×12 with 24+ inches of rug visible on all sides.
Which Tradition for Which Room
Living room: Beni Ourain (cream + dark minimalist) or Beni Mrirt (denser, more formal). Boujaad if you want warm reds. Avoid bright Azilal or Boucherouite in primary living rooms unless the room is deliberately bohemian.
Dining room: flat-woven kilim (Hanbel, Glaoua) — chairs slide more smoothly on flat weave than on pile. Or low-pile Beni Mrirt if you want pile but with manageable chair friction.
Bedroom: longer-pile Beni Ourain (3–4 cm pile) for plush foot landing. Paired 3×5 bedside Azilal or Boujaad rugs as an alternative to a single large rug.
Pricing by Size
Direct from Moroccan co-operative for Beni Ourain at standard 80 KPSI density: 3×5: $550–$900. 5×7: $1,100–$1,800. 6×9: $1,800–$2,800. 8×10: $3,200–$4,800. 9×12: $3,800–$5,800. 10×14: $4,500–$7,200. 12×15: $6,500–$11,000.
Beni Mrirt at 130+ KPSI: roughly 1.8 to 2.5× these prices. Western boutique retail typically adds 2 to 4× markup over direct pricing. Vintage and antique command premiums based on age, condition, and provenance.
Verifying Authentic Moroccan Construction
Three checks every area-rug buyer should run: back of rug (individual knots visible, no latex or canvas backing), fringe (woven into warp, not sewn on), and weight (5×7 hand-knotted wool: 11–15 kg). Below the labour-math floor (e.g. $600 for a 9×12), production is almost certainly machine-made or tufted despite marketing claims.
Hvad du kan verificere om os
- Direkte indkøb
- Atlas-kooperativerIngen mellemmænd mellem væveren og dig.
- Konstruktion
- Håndknyttet uldVerificeret i hvert trin — aldrig maskintuftet.
- Herkomst
- Dokumenteret pr. stykkeLandsby, væveperiode og, hvor vi har det, væverens navn.
- Returnering
- 14 dageI modtaget stand, fuld refundering af købsprisen.
Ofte stillede
Spørgsmål
- What size Moroccan area rug do I need?
- Living room: 8×10 or 9×12 minimum. Dining room: 6×9 to 9×12 depending on table size. Bedroom: 5×7 to 9×12 depending on bed size. Front legs of furniture should rest on the rug.
- Are Moroccan area rugs hand-knotted?
- Authentic Moroccan area rugs are hand-knotted on vertical looms by Amazigh weavers. Verify via back-of-rug photograph: individual visible knots, pattern legible from both sides.
- How much does a Moroccan area rug cost?
- 5×7 direct from co-operative: $1,100–$1,800. 9×12: $3,800–$5,800. Western boutique retail typically 2–4× these prices. Below these floors, expect machine-made imitations.
- How long do Moroccan area rugs last?
- Hand-knotted wool: 30–50+ years with normal care. Antique pre-1925 pieces are still in active household use after 100+ years. Machine-made imitations: 3–7 years before structural failure.
- Which Moroccan tradition is most popular?
- Beni Ourain — cream wool with sparse dark geometric motifs — has been the dominant Western-design Moroccan tradition since the 1920s. Suits modern minimalist, Scandinavian, mid-century, and Japandi interiors.
- Where can I buy a Moroccan area rug?
- Direct from Atlas co-operatives (best pricing), established direct-trade importers (good balance of value and return policies), Western design boutiques (premium retail), or specialist vintage dealers (for vintage and antique pieces).
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. Atlas Co-operative Direct Pricing
- 2. Berber Rug Trade Standards

Personen bag stykket
“Før du køber, sender jeg dig en video af det rigtige tæppe i dagslys — ikke et katalogfoto. Jeg svarer selv på beskederne.”
Jeg hedder Youssef. Jeg startede ARINID, fordi dette marked er fyldt med mellemmænd og maskinfremstillede efterligninger, der sælges som ægte — og jeg voksede op tæt nok på vævene til at kende forskellen.
Hvert stykke, vi fører, kan spores tilbage til det kooperativ, der vævede det. Vil du tale om mål til dit rum, er jeg i den anden ende af beskeden. Et tæppe på dette niveau er en beslutning for tredive år. Du bør kunne se den, der sælger det til dig, i øjnene.
Youssef
Grundlægger, ARINID
Næste skridt
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