Panel Curtains: What They Are, How Many You Need, and How to Hang Them Right
Shopping for curtains and confused by the word "panel"? That confusion is extremely common. Most curtain stores sell fabric by the single panel, not as a ready-to-hang set. That one detail trips up a lot of first-time buyers. Here is what you need to know before you order.
At a Glance
| Question | Answer |
| What is a panel curtain? | One single piece of curtain fabric |
| Typical panel width | 40 to 54 inches |
| Common lengths | 72, 84, 96, 108, 120 inches |
| How many for a standard window? | 2 panels |
| Sold as a pair? | Usually no. Check the listing. |
What "Panel Curtain" Actually Means
A panel curtain is one piece of curtain fabric. That is it. The word "panel" tells you about quantity, not style, material, or function. A blackout curtain, a sheer, and a velvet drape are all panel curtains if sold as individual pieces.
The Checkout Trap
Most brands sell one panel per listing. The product photo? That usually shows two panels hanging together. The price? Only covers one.
If you want both sides of the window covered, order two panels.
Quick Term Guide
| Term | Meaning |
| Curtain Panels | Same thing, different word order |
| Drapes | Heavier, longer, more formal panels |
| Curtain Set / Pair | Two panels in one package |
| Valance | Short piece for the top of the window only |
| Cafe Curtains | Short panels for the lower half, usually sold in pairs |

How Many Panels Do You Need?
It depends on your rod width and how full you want the fabric to look.
Fullness Explained
- 1.5x: Fabric width = 1.5 times the rod width. Flat, minimal look.
- 2x: Fabric width = 2 times the rod width. Full, natural folds. Most popular choice.
Grommet, rod pocket, and back tab curtains: use 2x fullness. For heavier or thicker fabrics, 2x fullness still produces the best result. Pinch pleat curtains: order panel width at 1.25x the rod width.The pleat construction adds extra fabric automatically.
Simple Math
- Measure your rod or track width
- Multiply by 2 (for standard fullness)
- Divide by the number of panels you want.
Panel Width = (Rod Width x Fullness) / Number of Panels
Quick check: Push all panels to one side of the rod. If the stacked fabric fills about a quarter of the rod, you have enough.
5 Ways to Use Panel Curtains
1. Standard Window
Two panels, one on each side, meeting in the middle. The classic setup for bedrooms and living rooms.
2. Single-Side Drape
All panels hang on one side. Works great when the window is right against a wall corner, or when you want a relaxed, asymmetric look. Usually needs only 1 to 2 panels.
3. Sliding Glass Doors
Extend the rod 6 to 15 inches past each side of the door frame. You will typically need 4 or more panels to cover the full width.
4. Room Divider
Hang panels from a ceiling-mounted track to split an open space. Great for studios and open floor plans. Use a track system, not a regular curtain rod.
5. Headboard Backdrop
Mount 2 to 4 panels behind the bed from a high rod. The fabric drops to the floor, creating a dramatic accent wall effect without paint or wallpaper.

Header Styles: Same Fabric, Different Look
The header is how the panel attaches to the rod. It changes the fold pattern and how easily the curtain slides.
Grommet
- Metal rings along the top; smooth S-shaped waves
- Slides easily; best for everyday use
- Fits most rods (standard 1.4 in. inner diameter)
Rod Pocket
- Fabric sleeve slides over the rod; dense, soft gathers
- Does not slide well; best for panels you rarely move
- Great for farmhouse and bohemian rooms
Rod Pocket & Back Tab
- Hidden loops on the back with a rod pocket sleeve
- clean front, no visible hardware
- Slides better than rod pocket
- Works in both casual and polished spaces
Pinch Pleat
- Stitched pleat groups; structured, straight vertical lines
- Needs hooks or rings; most formal look
- Pleats are sewn with built-in fabric for structured, straight vertical lines
Joydeco custom curtains are available in all four header styles: grommet, rod pocket, rod pocket & back tab, and pinch pleat.
5 Common Mistakes (and Easy Fixes)
Not Enough Panels
Curtains look flat and thin. Fix: Use at least 1.5x to 2x fullness. Add 1 to 2 more panels if the current setup looks sparse.
Panels Too Short
Curtains hover above the floor. Fix: Measure from the very top of the rod to the floor, not from the window frame. For pinch pleat on hooks: measure from the bottom of the hook to the floor.For pinch pleat on tracks: measure from the bottom of the track ring to the floor.
Three length options to choose from:
- Float: rod-to-floor distance minus 5 inch
- Kiss the floor: rod-to-floor distance exactly
- Puddle: rod-to-floor distance plus 10 to 20 inches
Rod Too Low
Ceiling looks short. Fix: Mount the rod 6 to 10 inches above the window frame.The rod should also extend 6 to 15 inches past each side of the window for proper stacking room. You will need longer panels, but the room will feel taller.
Header and Fabric Mismatch
| Fabric | Best Headers |
| Lightweight (sheer, cotton) | Rod pocket, rod pocket & back tab |
| Medium (linen, cotton blend) | Grommet, rod pocket & back tab |
| Heavy (velvet, blackout) | Grommet, pinch pleat |
Same Count on Every Window
A 72-inch window and a 36-inch window do not need the same number of panels. Calculate each window separately using the cheat sheet above.
Joydeco custom curtains can be made to your exact rod-to-floor measurements, which removes the guesswork on length entirely.

Start with Joydeco
Three things to get right: panel count, curtain length, and header style. Nail those and the rest is about picking your favorite fabric and color. Joydeco custom curtains let you set your exact size and header. Take a look at Joydeco.
FAQs about curtain panels
Is it better to have 2 or 4 curtain panels?
Two panels work for windows up to about 120 inches wide. Four panels fit wider windows or sliding doors. Aim for total fabric width around 2x your rod width.
Can you use an odd number of panels?
Yes. Odd numbers suit single-side draping or a center-fixed panel setup. For standard left-right splits, even numbers look more balanced.
Do curtain panels need to touch the floor?
Floor-length panels (about half an inch above the floor) look best in most rooms. Shorter panels work in kitchens or above radiators.
How do I stop panels from sliding to the middle?
Add a center support bracket to keep the rod straight. You can also place curtain stops or small clips between the outer ring and the finial.
Can I mix different panel fabrics in one room?
Yes. Keep one element consistent: same color with different textures, or same fabric in different shades. Avoid changing both at once.