Between the sofa and the television sits the most contested real estate in any family home. Adults want a clean sightline and a comfortable spot to put their feet. Babies want a safe surface to roll, crawl, and practice standing. The rug that fills this gap has to serve both needs without compromise.
This strip of floor, typically 5 to 8 feet deep and as wide as the seating area, is where interior design meets daily family life. Get it right and the living room functions beautifully. Get it wrong and you end up with a rug that bunches, slides, or leaves half the play zone uncushioned.
According to residential design experts at Apartment Therapy, the space between a sofa and entertainment center is the natural anchor point for a rug because it is the visual center of the room. For families, it is also the natural anchor point for a safe play surface.
Measuring the Sofa-to-TV Gap
Before choosing a rug, measure the actual distance from the front edge of your sofa to the base of your TV stand or entertainment center.
| Sofa-to-TV Distance | Recommended Rug Depth | Rug Width | Poco Koko Fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-6 feet | 4-5 feet | Match sofa width | Fits well (59" depth) |
| 7-8 feet | 5-6 feet | Match sofa width or wider | Fits with space at edges |
| 9-10 feet | 6-8 feet | Match or exceed sofa width | Centered, with floor border |
| Over 10 feet | Consider two rugs or one large rug | Full room width | Play zone in center section |
The Poco Koko play rug at 5 x 7 feet (60 x 84 inches) is sized to fill most standard sofa-to-TV gaps. In a typical layout where the sofa sits 7 to 8 feet from the TV, the rug covers the central play zone with a natural bare floor margin near the furniture on each end.
Placement: Two Approaches
Approach 1: Rug Touching the Sofa Base
Push the rug edge right up to the front of the sofa so there is no gap between where you sit and where the rug begins. This is the preferred approach when the rug will be used for floor seating, because adults sliding off the couch to sit with a baby land directly on cushioned surface.
Spacing guide:
- Rug front edge: flush with sofa base
- Rug back edge: 12-18 inches from TV stand
- Side margins: 6-12 inches of bare floor on each side
Approach 2: Centered Float With Equal Margins
Center the rug in the gap with equal space between the rug edge and the sofa, and the rug edge and the TV stand. This looks more intentional from a design perspective and works well when the rug has a distinct look from the rest of the floor.
Spacing guide:
- Front and back margins: equal, typically 12-18 inches each
- Side margins: 8-16 inches of bare floor on each side
In our experience setting up play zones for families, the flush-to-sofa approach wins for practicality. Parents spend a lot of time transitioning between the couch and the floor during play sessions, and eliminating that gap means one less bare-floor landing spot.
Making It Work With a Coffee Table
Many living rooms have a coffee table between the sofa and TV. If yours does:
- Small coffee table (under 36"): The rug can extend past the table on both sides. Place the table on the rug.
- Large coffee table (over 48"): The rug may need to sit in front of the table, between the table and TV. This creates a distinct play zone beyond the coffee table.
- No coffee table: The rug fills the entire center area uninterrupted, which is ideal for crawling babies and floor play.
For families who have temporarily removed the coffee table during the toddler years, a cushioned play rug in a neutral tone like Charcoal or Beige fills the visual gap elegantly while providing 1.3 inches of CertiPUR-US certified memory foam cushioning.
Width Matching: Rug vs. Sofa
The rug should be at least as wide as your primary seating piece, or slightly narrower. A rug that is dramatically narrower than the sofa creates a visual pinch point.
| Sofa Width | Minimum Rug Width | Ideal Rug Width |
|---|---|---|
| 72" (6 ft) | 60" (5 ft) | 72-84" |
| 84" (7 ft) | 72" (6 ft) | 84-96" |
| 96" (8 ft) | 84" (7 ft) | 96-108" |
| 108"+ sectional | 96"+ or two rugs | Full sectional width |
The Poco Koko at 79 inches wide pairs well with sofas in the 72 to 96 inch range, which covers most standard three-seater sofas and smaller sectionals.
Why This Zone Needs Cushioning
The sofa-to-TV corridor is where babies spend the most unsupervised-looking floor time. They roll toward the TV, pull up on the coffee table, cruise along the sofa edge, and topple backward. The American Academy of Pediatrics emphasizes the importance of supervised floor play on safe surfaces for motor development.
A standard woven rug offers no meaningful impact protection. The Poco Koko's 1.3-inch memory foam core with OEKO-TEX certified microsuede surface provides genuine cushioning that absorbs the energy of a toddler-height fall.
For a broader look at setting up your living room play area, see our play mat placement guide. To understand how play rugs differ from traditional options, read What Is a Play Rug?. And for the complete decision framework, visit the Ultimate Baby Play Mat Guide.
Browse the full play mats for living room collection to find your fit.
Frequently Asked Questions
How big should a rug be between a sofa and TV?
The rug should span at least 80 percent of the sofa width and cover most of the depth between the sofa front edge and the TV stand. For a typical 7-foot gap, a rug that is 5 feet deep and 6-7 feet wide works well.
Should the rug go under the TV stand?
Generally no. Leave 12 to 18 inches of bare floor between the rug edge and the TV stand. This prevents the rug from bunching against the furniture and creates a clean visual line.
Can I use a play rug as the main rug between the sofa and TV?
Yes. A play rug like Poco Koko in Charcoal or Beige looks like a premium area rug while providing memory foam cushioning. Its 5 x 7 foot dimensions are purpose-built for this exact placement zone.
What if my sofa-to-TV distance is too short for a rug?
If the gap is under 4 feet, a standard rug may look cramped. Consider removing the coffee table to open up the space, or use a thinner runner-style rug. If you have a baby, even a short-depth play rug provides meaningful cushioning in a tight space.
Does the rug need to be centered exactly between sofa and TV?
Not necessarily. Flush-to-sofa placement works well for families because it eliminates the uncushioned gap in front of the couch. Centered placement looks more formal. Both are design-correct.
Written by the Poco Koko Team — parents, product designers, and child safety researchers dedicated to creating safer floors for families.