Heavy furniture sitting on bare floors is a slow-motion disaster. Sofas crushing hardwood grain, dressers leaving lasting dents in vinyl, piano legs grinding into tile grout — the damage happens so gradually most people don’t notice until it’s too late. The right furniture pads prevent all of it. This self-adhesive furniture pads guide covers everything: how to size pads for your furniture, choose between furniture pads, heavy-duty, and foam, and apply them for long-lasting floor protection. Whether you’re protecting a single bookshelf or outfitting an entire hotel lobby, you’ll find your answer here. Thousands of homeowners and commercial operators have already made the switch.
Pads vs Glides — what’s the difference? Furniture pads go under stationary or rarely-moved furniture like sofas, beds, dressers, bookshelves, and appliances. If your furniture moves frequently — dining chairs, office chairs, kitchen stools — you need Furniture Glides with a PA6 fiber sliding surface instead. Pads protect the floor; glides protect it while letting furniture move. Not sure which? Our Furniture Glides Guide explains the difference in detail. Outfitting a hotel, restaurant, or commercial space? See our Business Solutions page for bulk pricing and B2B accounts.
Furniture pad sizing starts with measuring the base of the furniture leg or foot — and the reason our customers get a perfect fit on the first order is that measuring takes about 30 seconds per piece. Here’s what most people get wrong — whether they’re a homeowner or a facilities manager ordering hundreds: they measure the leg at the middle instead of the bottom. The bottom is what contacts the floor, and that’s what your pad needs to cover.
If your furniture leg has a circular cross-section, measure the diameter straight across the widest point at the base. Not the top, not the middle — the very bottom where the furniture pad will sit. That base measurement determines your size.
Equal sides means you only need one measurement. Measure one side at the base of the leg. If the sides aren’t equal, you actually have a rectangular leg — measure both dimensions to find the right furniture pad.
Rectangular legs have unequal sides, so you’ll need two measurements: width and length, both taken at the base. This shape is especially common on mid-century modern and Scandinavian furniture.
Flip the furniture over or lay it on its side. You need clear access to the bottom of the leg — that flat face is where your furniture pad will sit, and it’s the only surface that matters for sizing.
Grab a ruler, tape measure, or calipers. For round legs, measure the diameter across the widest point. For square and rectangular legs, measure each side — you’ll need both dimensions to pick the right furniture pad.
Many modern and mid-century furniture legs taper, meaning the bottom is narrower than the top. Always measure at the bottom. If you measure higher up, you’ll order a furniture pad that’s too large, and it will overhang and peel off.
If your measurement falls between two sizes, always go with the smaller furniture pad. One that overhangs the leg catches on things, lifts at the edges, and eventually peels right off. Slightly smaller is always better than slightly larger.
| Pad Type | Shape | Size Range | Height |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regular | Round | ⌀ 12–300 mm (33 sizes) | 5.5 mm |
| Square | 20×20 – 300×300 mm (31 sizes) | 5.5 mm | |
| Rectangular | 19×510 strip + 20×30 – 60×300 mm (109 sizes) | 5.5 mm | |
| Heavy-Duty | Round | ⌀ 30–300 mm (28 sizes) | 11 mm |
| Square | 30×30 – 300×300 mm (28 sizes) | 11 mm | |
| Rectangular | 20×30 – 60×460 mm (104 sizes) | 11 mm | |
| Foam | Round | ⌀ 18–300 mm (31 sizes) | 7 mm |
| Square | 18×18 – 300×300 mm (31 sizes) | 7 mm | |
| Rectangular | 20×30 – 60×300 mm (103 sizes) | 7 mm |
Choosing the right furniture pads is simpler than most people expect, and our customers consistently tell us they wish they’d found this guide sooner. You need to answer two questions: how heavy is the furniture, and is your floor perfectly level? The answers point you to one of three pad types — and all three use the same proven PA6 needle-punched fiber surface that protects your floors.
Our most popular choice. PA6 needle-punched polyamide fiber on an EHBT fiberglass mesh acrylic tape backing. Designed for furniture that stays mostly in place on smooth, level hard floors. The PA6 surface resists compression under sustained weight while protecting flooring from scratches and scuffs.
Best for:
Round (⌀ 12–300 mm, 33 sizes), square (20×20–300×300 mm, 31 sizes), rectangular (19×510 strip + 20×30–60×300 mm, 109 sizes). Height: 5.5 mm (0.22″). EHBT backing.
Same PA6 needle-punched fiber surface, but thicker and denser for extreme weight loads. When a furniture pad would compress too quickly under heavy furniture, heavy-duty maintains its structure and floor protection over years of sustained pressure. The thicker profile also provides better sound dampening.
Best for:
Round (⌀ 30–300 mm, 28 sizes), square (30×30–300×300 mm, 28 sizes), rectangular (20×30–60×460 mm, 104 sizes). Height: 11 mm (0.44″). EHBT backing.
PA6 fiber surface on a compressible foam core with EHBT + EHBF dual adhesive backing. When your floor isn’t perfectly level, the foam conforms to minor irregularities — grout lines, textured tile, settling. Eliminates wobble and ensures full floor contact.
Best for:
Round (⌀ 18–300 mm, 31 sizes), square (18×18–300×300 mm, 31 sizes), rectangular (20×30–60×300 mm, 103 sizes). Height: 7 mm (0.28″). EHBT + EHBF backing.
The short version: Regular pads (5.5 mm) handle everyday furniture on smooth, level floors. Heavy-duty pads (11 mm) handle the heaviest pieces — pianos, safes, solid marble. Foam pads (7 mm) solve wobble problems on uneven or textured floors. When in doubt between regular and heavy-duty, go heavy-duty. When in doubt about your floor, go foam.
Furniture pads are designed for hard floors — any smooth surface where bare furniture legs would scratch, dent, or scuff. If your furniture sits on carpet, you don’t need pads. If it sits on any type of hard flooring, you do. Click any floor type below to see matching pads in our shop.
NWFA Approved: Our PA6 needle-punched fiber surface meets National Wood Flooring Association (NWFA) recommendations for furniture contact with hardwood floors — giving you peace of mind that your investment is protected to professional standards.
⚠️ Rough hard surfaces: Textured tile, unpolished slate, and stamped concrete create minor surface irregularities — use our foam pads, which conform to these surfaces. However, raw concrete and extremely abrasive surfaces can wear through PA6 fiber over time. For those floors, use Furniture Slides (ABS surface) instead.
💡 Carpet and soft floors: Furniture pads are not designed for carpet — the adhesive surface sits against the furniture leg, and the PA6 fiber surface needs a hard floor beneath it. For furniture on carpet, see our Furniture Slides Guide for ABS sliding surfaces designed specifically for soft floors.
Every piece of furniture puts different demands on its pads. Here’s how to choose the right type and size for the most common furniture in your home or business.
Sofas and armchairs typically have four legs or feet with a flat base. Measure the bottom of each foot. Furniture pads handle typical living room furniture on smooth floors. For exceptionally heavy pieces (solid wood frame, pullout bed), step up to heavy-duty. For uneven floors, foam pads eliminate wobble.
Pianos, gun safes, and file cabinets need heavy-duty pads — no exceptions. These pieces concentrate extreme weight on small contact points. The 11 mm heavy-duty pad resists compression under sustained multi-year loads that would flatten a regular pad. Measure each foot and size up if between sizes.
Bed frames and dressers often have small feet or sit on rails. Measure each foot and choose furniture pads or heavy-duty based on the furniture’s weight. Fully loaded dressers (clothes, mirror) often justify heavy-duty. Rectangular pads work well for rail-style bases.
These pieces sit in one place and carry moderate weight — furniture pads in the right shape and size are all you need. Round pads for round legs, square for square. Measure the flat bottom of the leg, not the sides. For glass-top tables with heavy bases, consider heavy-duty.
Refrigerators, washers, dryers, and commercial kitchen equipment benefit from heavy-duty pads. The 11 mm thickness dampens motor vibration and prevents appliances from walking across the floor. Measure the feet on the bottom of the unit. Rectangular pads often fit appliance feet best.
Hotel lobby furniture, waiting room seating, reception desks, and restaurant host stands need pads that won’t fail under continuous use. Heavy-duty is the standard for commercial. Our B2B program offers volume pricing and product selection guidance for large-scale projects.
Every furniture pad is engineered as a complete protection system — each material plays a specific role in silent gliding, durability, and floor protection.
Two precision-engineered components protect your floors from the weight of everyday furniture. The PA6 fiber surface sits against the floor while the EHBT adhesive bonds to the furniture leg.
Two precision-engineered components handle extreme weight loads from pianos, safes, marble furniture, and commercial equipment. Same construction as furniture pads, but with doubled thickness for maximum compression resistance.
Three precision-engineered layers solve the uneven floor problem. The PA6 fiber protects the floor, the foam core conforms to surface irregularities, and the dual adhesive system bonds securely to any furniture leg.
Our most popular application guides have helped thousands of customers get this right on the first try. The whole process takes about two minutes of reading and five minutes of doing — whether you’re fitting four sofa feet or four hundred hotel lobby chairs.
Wipe the bottom of every furniture leg with isopropyl alcohol (70% or higher). This removes dust, wax, silicone residue, and oils that weaken adhesive bonds. Let it dry completely — about 30 seconds. Skip this step and the pad will peel off within weeks.
Peel the protective backing film off the furniture pad. Discard it immediately — if the exposed adhesive touches anything other than the clean leg surface, contamination weakens the bond. Handle the pad by the edges.
Center the furniture pad on the leg base and press firmly for a full 30 seconds. Apply even pressure across the entire surface — not just the middle. The adhesive needs sustained contact pressure to establish an initial bond. If the pad is slightly oversized, it’s better to trim it than let it hang over the edge.
Set the furniture back down gently. The weight of the furniture actually helps the adhesive cure by maintaining consistent pressure. The EHBT adhesive bonds on contact. You can use the furniture immediately. The bond continues to strengthen under the weight of the furniture over the first few hours.
When a pad wears out or compresses flat, replace it with a new one. Trying to re-stick a used pad never works — the adhesive is designed for a single application. Remove the old pad, clean the surface with alcohol, and apply a fresh one.
Round legs get round pads. Square legs get square pads. The pad should be the same size or slightly smaller than the leg base — never larger. A pad that overhangs the edge will catch on things and peel off. Measure the bottom of the leg, not the sides.
If your furniture wobbles after applying furniture pads or heavy-duty pads, the floor may not be level. Switch to foam pads — the compressible foam core conforms to minor surface irregularities and eliminates wobble. This is especially common on textured tile, natural stone, and older hardwood floors with settling.
Outfitting an entire hotel, restaurant, or office? Work in batches — flip all furniture in one area, clean all legs, then apply all pads. This assembly-line approach is 3× faster than doing one piece at a time. Our Business Solutions team can help with product selection and volume pricing for large projects.
Most furniture pads on the market still use the same basic design from twenty years ago — here’s why Superior Glide makes the best floor protection pads: a thin piece of pressed felt with a dot of hotmelt adhesive. Our customers kept telling us the same story — pads falling off within weeks, felt compressing flat, floors getting scratched anyway. That’s exactly why we engineered something different. Superior Pad uses PA6 needle-punched polyamide fiber — the same material used in our furniture glides — with EHBT fiberglass mesh acrylic tape applied to all edges, not just the center. The result is a pad that stays attached, maintains its cushion, and protects your floors for years instead of weeks.
Surface: PA6 needle-punched polyamide fiber, 1,450 g/m² pile density, vertically interlocked. Resists lateral shearing without delaminating. No glues in manufacturing.
Platform: Automotive-grade ABS plastic. Shock-resistant, dimensionally stable, won’t crack or age.
Bonding: Superglue applied to all edges and corners. Manual application, manual quality check. The surface stays attached even under heavy lateral stress.
Adhesive: EHBT fiberglass mesh acrylic tape. High bonding strength, waterproof. Applied to the full back surface for maximum grip on any furniture leg material. Available in round, square, and rectangular.
Surface: Horizontal nylon felt layers pressed together with adhesive. Layers separate under lateral force. Humidity accelerates failure because glue holds the layers together.
Platform: PE (polyethylene) plastic. Brittle, prone to cracking, ages quickly.
Bonding: A single drop of hotmelt in the center of the platform. Felt peels from corners first — exactly where stress concentrates.
Fastener: Standard nail. Narrow head not molded into plastic. Only available in round (other shapes would need 2+ nails). Plastic can break loose, leaving the nail to gouge your floor.
Thousands of customers — from first-time homeowners to hotel chains and property managers — rely on this guide. Save it and refer back whenever you rearrange furniture, buy new pieces, or change your flooring. Managing a commercial property? Visit our Business Solutions page for volume pricing, B2B accounts, and dedicated support.
Furniture pads are self-adhesive protectors for stationary furniture — sofas, dressers, beds, bookshelves, tables. They protect your floor from scratches and dents caused by furniture weight. Furniture glides are designed for furniture that moves frequently, like dining chairs and office chairs. Glides have a mounting system (nail-on or self-adhesive) and a specialized sliding surface. If your furniture moves, use glides. If it stays put, use pads.
Foam pads are specifically designed for uneven floors. If your floors aren’t perfectly level — older homes with settling, textured tile, natural stone with grout lines, or concrete with minor imperfections — the compressible foam base conforms to the surface irregularities. This eliminates wobble and ensures full floor contact. On perfectly smooth, level floors, furniture pads or heavy-duty pads are the better choice.
It comes down to weight. Furniture pads handle everyday furniture like sofas, coffee tables, bed frames, and bookshelves. Heavy-duty pads are thicker and denser for extreme weight: grand pianos, upright pianos, gun safes, solid marble tables, file cabinets, and appliances like refrigerators. When in doubt, choose heavy-duty — the price difference is minimal and you get extra compression resistance.
No. Furniture pads are designed for hard floors only. The PA6 fiber surface needs a smooth hard surface beneath it to protect against scratches and distribute weight. For furniture on carpet, you need furniture slides with ABS plastic surfaces designed specifically for soft floors.
Clean the bottom of each furniture leg with rubbing alcohol to remove dust, wax, and oils. Let it dry completely (30 seconds). Peel the backing off the pad and press firmly onto the center of the leg base. Apply even pressure for 10–15 seconds. Set the furniture down on the floor and let the adhesive cure for 24 hours before moving the piece. The EHBT acrylic tape adhesive reaches full bond strength after application.
On stationary furniture, our PA6 pads last significantly longer than cheap felt pads. The needle-punched fiber resists compression and doesn’t pill or flatten like pressed felt. Most customers report years of use before needing replacement. Heavy furniture may compress furniture pads faster — that’s why we recommend heavy-duty pads for anything exceptionally heavy.
Measure the bottom of each furniture leg or foot. The pad should be the same size or slightly smaller than the leg base — never larger. A pad that hangs over the edge will peel off under load. For round legs, measure the diameter. For square or rectangular legs, measure both dimensions. Our pads range from 12 mm (½″) to 300 mm (12″), with rectangular strips up to 510 mm (20″).
Yes. Unlike nail-on glides which require solid wood, self-adhesive furniture pads bond to any clean, smooth surface: wood, metal, plastic, composite, and rubber. This makes them the universal choice for modern furniture with metal legs, plastic feet, or mixed-material designs.
Browse other product categories: Furniture Glides · Furniture Slides · Furniture Pads · Tube Plugs & End Caps · Adjustable Leveling Feet · Sled Base Glides
Guide pages: Glide Guide · Slide Guide · Pad Guide · Tube Plugs Guide · Leveling Feet Guide · Sled Base Glides Guide