Beni Ourain Rug 8x10
An 8×10 Beni Ourain is the most internationally produced configuration in Moroccan rug commerce — the meeting point of the most internationally collected style and the most commonly specified Western size. If you have spent any time looking at design magazines, Instagram interiors, or showroom photographs from Eames, Knoll, or Restoration Hardware, the rug you are looking at is most likely an 8×10 Beni Ourain. This page covers what to look for in this specific format, what it costs, and the trade-offs between buying contemporary versus vintage at this size.
Why 8×10 Beni Ourain Is the Default
Two reasons. First, the size — 240×300 cm is the American living-room standard, and the United States is the largest single market for Moroccan rugs internationally. Second, the style — Beni Ourain has the longest continuous design-press presence of any Moroccan tradition (since 1929) and has the broadest aesthetic compatibility across modern, mid-century, Scandinavian, and japandi interiors.
The combination produces an extraordinary commercial demand. Cooperative producers in the Middle Atlas now design specifically for 8×10 export, with production schedules organised around this dimension. Whether this is a good thing depends on perspective — it has professionalised production and improved weaver income, but also standardised the category in ways that traditional Moroccan proportions did not require.
What to Look For in an 8×10 Beni Ourain
All the general Beni Ourain authentication checks apply at this size, but a few become particularly important.
Wool consistency across a larger area: in a smaller piece, slight tonal variation in the wool is barely visible. In an 8×10, the variation becomes architecturally important. Look for subtle natural variation (real Atlas wool) rather than perfect uniformity (bleached) or visible patchwork (different batches of wool poorly matched).
Motif scale: the diamonds and lozenges in an 8×10 Beni Ourain are typically 15-25 cm across. Too small (under 10 cm) reads as busy; too large (above 35 cm) reads as crude. The weaver's judgement of motif scale relative to rug size is one of the markers of mastery.
Knot density consistency: at 240×300 cm, fluctuations in knot density become visible as variations in pile height across the rug. Look for visual consistency across the field as you walk around the rug.
Contemporary vs Vintage at This Size
Contemporary 8×10 Beni Ourain: €1,800-€4,200. Made specifically for export, in standardised Western dimensions, with current cooperative infrastructure. New condition, predictable quality, immediate availability.
Vintage 8×10 Beni Ourain: €4,000-€18,000+. Rare in this exact dimension because vintage production followed older Moroccan proportions (7×11, 6×12). The vintage 8×10 pieces that do exist are often slightly off-standard (230×290, 250×310) and are typically post-1980 — too recent to have the deepest patina of older pieces.
Recommendation for first-time buyers: contemporary. The price-to-quality ratio is better for new pieces in 8×10, the supply is more reliable, and the contemporary production matches the visual expectations of modern interiors. Reserve vintage purchases for either older proportions (where the patina value is highest) or specific documented pieces with auction-grade provenance.
Placement and Furniture Pairing
An 8×10 Beni Ourain sits under a 3-seat sofa with the rug extending 20-30 cm beyond the sofa sides. Front legs of accompanying chairs rest on the rug. The rug-to-sofa relationship is the determining factor; the rug should feel like it accommodates the seating rather than just sitting in front of it.
Furniture that pairs particularly well: low linen or natural-leather sofas (the rug's warmth complements both), oak or walnut coffee tables (wood tones harmonise with ivory wool), low chairs with thin legs (the rug's pile reads as substantial in contrast).
Furniture that conflicts: high-gloss chrome-and-glass tables (too cold against the warm wool), patterned-upholstery sectionals (competes with the rug's geometry), red or saturated-coloured leather (the colour interaction is uncomfortable). For these interiors, consider an Azilal or Boujaad instead — they support saturated colour better than Beni Ourain does.
Logistics for an 8×10 Beni Ourain
Weight: 18-26 kg depending on pile depth.
Shipping from Morocco: 7-14 days international freight, rolled in single package. Insurance recommended for pieces above €1,500.
Pad: 235×295 cm rug pad (5 cm inset on each side) — €40-€80 for a quality felt-and-rubber pad.
Care: vacuum without beater bar weekly, rotate every six months, professional clean every 5-7 years. Standard Berber rug care applies.
Hva du kan verifisere om oss
- Direkte innkjøp
- Atlas-kooperativerIngen mellomledd mellom veveren og deg.
- Konstruksjon
- Håndknyttet ullVerifisert i hvert trinn — aldri maskintuftet.
- Opphav
- Dokumentert per stykkeLandsby, veveperiode og, der vi har det, veverens navn.
- Retur
- 14 dagerI mottatt stand, full refusjon av kjøpesummen.
Ofte stilte
Spørsmål
- What size is a Beni Ourain 8×10?
- Approximately 240 × 300 cm (also expressed as 8 feet × 10 feet). The international cooperative producers in Morocco standardise to 240×300 for export.
- How much does an 8×10 Beni Ourain cost?
- Contemporary museum-quality: €1,800-€4,200. Vintage with documented provenance: €4,000-€18,000+ — though vintage in exactly 8×10 dimensions is uncommon.
- Is an 8×10 Beni Ourain the right size for my living room?
- For most American and UK living rooms with 3-seat sofa and 2 chairs: yes. The rug extends past the sofa sides and accommodates the chairs. For very large rooms (>30 m²) or sectional configurations: consider 9×12 instead.
- How long does it take to weave an 8×10 Beni Ourain?
- A single weaver needs 4-6 months. Cooperative production with multiple weavers (more common for export) reduces this to 6-10 weeks. Custom orders from Morocco typically have 8-16 week lead times.
- Are vintage 8×10 Beni Ourain rugs available?
- Limited supply. Vintage Moroccan production followed older proportions (often 7×11 or 6×12 in Western feet) rather than 8×10. The vintage 8×10 pieces that exist are typically post-1980 and have less deep patina than older pieces in traditional proportions.
- What weighs an 8×10 Beni Ourain?
- 18-26 kg depending on pile depth and knot density. Two adults can rotate it easily; one adult can manage with careful technique.
- What's the best place to buy an 8×10 Beni Ourain?
- Direct from a Moroccan cooperative (lowest price, longest lead time), through a specialist Western dealer (mid-range price, immediate availability), or at auction (variable price, occasional bargains). Avoid generic online marketplaces without verified provenance.
- How does an 8×10 Beni Ourain differ from 9×12?
- Size, weight, price. 8×10 is 240×300 cm; 9×12 is 270×360 cm (about 35% more area). 8×10 costs €1,800-€4,200 contemporary; 9×12 costs €2,400-€5,500. 8×10 weighs 18-26 kg; 9×12 weighs 28-40 kg. The aesthetic is identical — both are Beni Ourain — just at different scales.
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. internal_research8×10 production economics and lead times
- 2. competitor_pricing8×10 Beni Ourain price range across Moroccan and Western markets

Personen bak stykket
«Før du kjøper, sender jeg deg en video av det faktiske teppet i dagslys — ikke et katalogbilde. Jeg svarer på meldingene selv.»
Jeg heter Youssef. Jeg startet ARINID fordi dette markedet er fullt av mellomledd og maskinlagde imitasjoner som selges som ekte — og jeg vokste opp nær nok vevstolene til å kjenne forskjellen.
Hvert stykke vi fører kan spores tilbake til kooperativet som vevde det. Vil du snakke om mål for rommet ditt, er jeg i den andre enden av meldingen. Et teppe på dette nivået er en beslutning for tretti år. Du bør kunne se den som selger det til deg i øynene.
Youssef
Grunnlegger, ARINID
Neste steg
Se hvert Beni Ourain Rug 8x10 vi tilbyr akkurat nå
Hvert stykke er håndknyttet i Atlasfjellene og sendes direkte hjem til deg, med dokumentert opphav og vever.