# How to Measure for a Suit at Home (Groom's Guide)

> Eight numbers stand between him and a suit that looks made for him. Here is how to take each one at the kitchen table, the way the online and rental houses actually ask.

*Published 2026-06-24 · Updated 2026-06-24 · By Marcus Ellery*

The short version
When he orders a wedding suit online or rents a tuxedo, the numbers you submit *are* the fit — there is no shop tailor to quietly correct a mistake. Use a flexible cloth tape, dress him in a fitted T-shirt, measure **snug, not tight** (one finger under the tape), take each line twice, and when he is between sizes, **size up** so a tailor has cloth to remove. Submit eight to twelve weeks out so there is room to alter before the day.

There was a time when a groom was measured in person, a tailor's tape moving over his shoulders while he stood still and trusted the result. Online made-to-measure and modern rental have moved that quiet ritual into your own home. It is faster and often kinder to the budget — but the accuracy now rests entirely on the person holding the tape, which on most evenings will be you. The good news is that the major houses have made the method clear and forgiving, and an hour at the kitchen table is all it takes to do it properly.

## Why do at-home measurements matter so much for a wedding suit?

Because there is no safety net. When he walks into a shop, a fitter catches the inch you missed; when he submits a profile to [Indochino](https://www.indochino.com/measurements) or [Hockerty](https://www.hockerty.com/en-us/blog/suit-size-chart), those numbers go straight to the cutting table. Indochino's self-measurement profile asks for roughly fifteen to twenty figures for a two-piece suit — close to what a bench tailor takes — and recommends a helper and a short video walk-through; it takes under ten minutes. Rental houses such as Generation Tux ask for a slightly shorter list, but their guidance is just as firm: a tuxedo has to sit cleanly from chest and waist to sleeve and leg, and his everyday clothing size will not get him there on its own.

The margins are small. [Men's Wearhouse](https://www.menswearhouse.com/blog/all-about-mens-suits/how-to-take-suit-measurements/) notes that a chest reading off by a single inch is the difference between a sharp modern jacket and a boxy one — and that the shoulder is the hardest line of all to alter once the jacket is sewn. That is precisely why it is worth slowing down for the half-hour it takes.

## What do you need before you start, and how should he stand?

Very little, but the details matter. Gather a **flexible cloth or tailor's tape** — never a rigid carpenter's tape, which will not curve to the body — a full-length mirror, good light, and a pad to write each number down twice. Dress him in **thin, form-fitting clothing**: a fitted T-shirt and underwear. Bulky layers quietly add inches everywhere.

Have him stand relaxed and natural — shoulders down, arms at the sides — with no puffing of the chest and no pulling in of the stomach. Keep the tape **snug, not tight**: it should lie flat with about a half-inch of ease, roughly one finger underneath. Measure each area twice and, if the readings disagree, take a third and use the most consistent. One last quiet detail from Indochino's guidance: the waist and seat run about half an inch to an inch smaller in the morning than after dinner, so pick one time of day and keep to it.

## How do you take each measurement, step by step?

Work top to bottom, writing as you go. Most online houses and rental sizers ask for some combination of these lines.

The groom's core measurements and how to take each one
MeasurementHow to take itWhat to watch for

Chest (sets jacket size)Around the fullest part, high under the arms, tape level all the way round, arms relaxed; keep a half-inch of ease.Jacket size is labeled by chest — a 42-inch chest is a 42; height sets the letter (R, L, S).
ShouldersFrom the bony point of one shoulder to the other, tape following the curve of the upper back.The hardest line to alter later — needs a helper; get it right first.
Sleeve lengthFrom the shoulder point down a slightly bent arm to the wrist bone on the pinky side.Should end at the wrist bone, showing about a half-inch of shirt cuff. Don't measure over thick clothing.
Jacket (back) lengthFrom the base of the neck, below the collar, to about the knuckle of the thumb with arms relaxed.Should just cover the seat. Don't start at the top of the collar.
Waist (sets trouser)At the true waist near the navel — about four fingers below the belly button — tape level, one finger of ease.Suit trousers sit higher than jeans; the jeans size is usually wrong.
Seat / hipsAround the widest point of the seat, tape level all the way round.Don't tense; stand naturally.
InseamFrom the crotch seam down the inside of the leg to the ankle bone, measured with shoes on.Most subtract about a half-inch for a classic break; the desired break changes the number.

For a broad-shouldered groom, some rental sizers also take an **overarm** measurement — around the broadest part of the chest and shoulders together — and subtract seven to confirm jacket size; a 47-inch overarm points to a 40 jacket. And a useful reference number: the standard "drop" between jacket and trouser is six, so a 40 jacket commonly pairs with a 34 waist. A man who falls outside that drop is a candidate for ordering separates or planning a tailor visit from the start.

## When should the groom measure, and what if he is between sizes?

Give yourselves a cushion. Online made-to-measure typically ships in two to four weeks, and nearly every suit — bought or rented — looks better after one final local alteration. Submitting his profile **eight to twelve weeks before the wedding** leaves room for shipping, a fitting, and a calm second pass if anything needs adjusting. The week-before scramble is how grooms end up in jackets that almost fit.

When he lands between two sizes, **size up**. A tailor can take a jacket or a waist in with ease, but letting a shoulder or chest out is, in practice, impossible. Hockerty and Indochino both let him save a profile and reorder, and Hockerty even offers a photo-based digital body profile if a tape feels daunting — but the manual method, with you as his helper, remains the most reliable way to get a wedding suit that looks unmistakably made for him.

## Sources

1. [Save Your Measurements for the Perfect Fit](https://www.indochino.com/measurements)
2. [A Complete Guide to Sizing Your Tuxedo](https://generationtux.com/blog/how-to-guides/tuxedo-measurements)
3. [How to Measure Waist, Chest, Shoulder and Sleeve for a Suit](https://www.menswearhouse.com/blog/all-about-mens-suits/how-to-take-suit-measurements/)
4. [Men's Suit Size Chart: How to Measure Yourself](https://www.hockerty.com/en-us/blog/suit-size-chart)

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Source: https://groomatlas.com/suit-and-tux-fit/groom-suit-measurement-guide
Index: https://groomatlas.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://groomatlas.com/llms-full.txt
