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Split Bedroom House Plans and Split Master Bedroom Suite Floor Plans

Lovely, affordable Florida style home with gables, one level living, 4 bedrooms and over 1900 square feet.

Featured House Plan with Split Bedroom Layout

Gables, decorative vents, corbel brackets, arches an...

Characterized by the unique separation of space, split bedroom layout plans allow homeowners to create a functional arrangement of bedrooms that does not hinder the flow of the main living area. These types of homes can appear in single- or two-story homes, with many different possible room layouts, depending on the house's overall design.

Features of Split Bedroom House Plans

In a single-story house with a split master...
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Characterized by the unique separation of space, split bedroom layout plans allow homeowners to create a functional arrangement of bedrooms that does not hinder the flow of the main living area. These types of homes can appear in single- or two-story homes, with many different possible room layouts, depending on the house's overall design.

Features of Split Bedroom House Plans

In a single-story house with a split master bedroom, the primary suite typically appears on one side of the dwelling while the other bedrooms sit on the other, with the living room and kitchen in between. This reduces the need for hallways, which waste precious space and create disruptive divisions within the entertaining areas while allowing you to spend more of your budget on other house features.

Depending on the overall floor plan layout, the primary bedroom may sit at the rear of the house or off to a single side, along with the primary bathroom, allowing for extra privacy as it doesn’t share walls with the other bedrooms.

Two-story split-bedroom house plans frequently place the master bedroom on the ground floor, exclusively reserving the upper floors for the additional bedrooms. This layout is common for families, especially those with older children. It allows the parents easy access to their room while giving the children more space and independence. Because the children’s rooms are not on the home's main floor, it also results in more space in the main living area. This allows for creating a spacious, open-floor-plan concept on the main floor, seamlessly combining the kitchen, living room, and dining room. This plan layout also makes it easier for aging homeowners to access the master bedroom because it doesn’t require climbing stairs.

Browse through our split bedroom floor plans collection, and reach out with any questions you may have.

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From the design book

Split Bedroom Layout? 6 Reasons Why You Should Consider It for Your New Home


TPC author Tim Bakke
By

Privacy Is Important in Your Home. Here’s How to Maintain It   Imagine you like to go to bed early – and get up early – but the teenage kids prefer to stay up later and inevitably wake you up when they go to bed. Or you work nights and need to sleep during the day, but the kids make noise playing in their bedrooms or going from room to room. You need privacy and need to be separate from those secondary bedrooms. There are two main ways to group bedrooms when constructing homes. In one way, all of the be


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