To read a size chart correctly before buying clothes online, measure your body first — bust, waist, hips, and shoulders — then compare those numbers to the size chart’s garment measurements, not just the size label. Add 1–2 inches to your body measurement for woven fabrics (cotton, linen, georgette) and 0–1 inch for knit or stretch fabrics before selecting a size.
- Size labels (S, M, L, XL) mean nothing on their own — measurements do.
- Size charts show garment measurements, not body measurements. The gap between them is called ease allowance, and ignoring it causes most fit failures.
- The same “M” from Brand A can measure 38 inches at the bust; Brand B’s “M” may measure 36 inches. Always verify in centimetres or inches.
- Fabric type changes your size decision: a non-stretch cotton kurta in your exact bust size will pull and gap at the buttons.
The Real Reason Your Online Orders Don’t Fit
You’ve ordered the same size you always wear. The parcel arrives. The kurta pulls across the bust, or the trousers gap at the waist, or the co-ord top hangs off one shoulder. You blame the brand.
The brand is rarely the problem. The assumption is.
“M” is not a measurement. It’s a label that every brand defines differently. One brand’s M is cut for a 36-inch bust. Another brand’s M is cut for a 38-inch bust. Neither is wrong — they simply have different fit standards, and no label tells you which is which.
The failure point is not choosing the wrong size label. It happens when a buyer compares their past label experience to a new brand’s size chart — without checking whether their body measurements actually match that brand’s garment measurements.
In client fittings, one of the most consistent patterns I see is shoppers arriving with a size label in their heads — “I’m an M” or “I always take L in kurtas” — and ordering on that basis alone. Two garments labelled M can fit completely differently because their actual garment measurements differ by 2–3 inches. The label is a shortcut the brand uses for their own reference. It has no fixed meaning across brands.
This matters more than it seems. Sizing and fit issues consistently rank among the leading causes of online fashion returns across global markets — and in India, where sizing is even less standardised than in Western retail, the problem compounds. The garment arrives, the size is right, but the fit is wrong.
Body Measurements vs Garment Measurements: The Difference That Causes Returns
Every size chart on every Indian fashion website shows garment measurements — the actual dimensions of the stitched piece of clothing. Your body measurements are different. The planned gap between the two is called ease allowance, and it exists so the garment can move with your body instead of against it.
If your bust measures 36 inches and you order a kurta with a 36-inch garment bust measurement, it will fit like a fitted blouse with no room to breathe, sit, or raise your arms. For a regular fit in a non-stretch fabric like cotton or linen, the garment bust should measure 38–40 inches to sit comfortably on a 36-inch body. Cotton’s stiffness directly affects how much ease you need — stiffer weaves need more, not less.
For knit fabrics — jersey, rib-knit, modal blends — the fabric itself provides 2–4 inches of stretch, so the garment measurement can be closer to or even slightly under your body measurement.
The Five Measurements That Actually Decide Fit
| Measurement | Where to Measure | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Bust | Fullest part of the chest, tape parallel to floor | Decides whether tops, kurtas, and dresses open or gap |
| Waist | Narrowest part of the torso, usually 1 inch above the navel | Decides whether waistbands sit or dig in |
| Hips | Fullest part of the seat, usually 8–9 inches below the waist | Decides whether trousers, palazzos, and skirts pass the hips |
| Shoulders | Seam to seam across the back, or tip of one shoulder to the other | Critical for shirts and structured tops — a shoulder seam that falls off the edge makes everything look oversized |
| Inseam / Length | Crotch to ankle for trousers; shoulder to hem for dresses and kurtas | A kurta 3 inches too long reads as a dress; trousers 4 inches short read as cropped |
Measure standing up, in fitted clothes or a bra. Tape should be snug but not pulled tight. Write all five numbers down before you open a size chart.
Why the Same Size Fits Differently Across Brands
Indian fashion brands do not follow a standardised sizing system. A size M at a fast-fashion label targeting college students is cut leaner than an M at a brand targeting working women in their 30s. Many global brands use fit blocks developed for different target markets, which can create consistent fit differences for Indian shoppers — particularly at the hips and thighs, where the garment may feel correctly sized at the bust but pull or tighten below.
Ethnic wear adds another layer. Kurtis are typically sized for the bust measurement only — the waist and hips are left unstructured and free-flowing. Western wear (trousers, jeans, co-ord sets) is sized for bust and hips simultaneously, which is where fit problems multiply. If you’re a 36-inch bust and a 40-inch hip, no single Western size will fit both measurements in a fitted silhouette — you’ll need to size up to the hip and account for the looser waist separately. Understanding how proportional sizing works for your body type helps you make faster size decisions without guesswork.
Understanding Fit Types Before Reading a Size Chart
The same set of measurements produces four completely different garments depending on the fit type. Reading the number on a size chart without knowing the intended fit type leads to the wrong decision even when the numbers seem right.
| Fit Type | Ease Allowance (Bust) | What It Looks Like on the Body | When to Size Up |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slim Fit | 0–1 inch over body measurement | Follows the body shape; no excess fabric | If you prefer comfort over structure, or carry weight at the arms |
| Regular Fit | 2–3 inches over body measurement | Comfortable without being loose; professional appearance | If the garment is non-stretch cotton or linen |
| Relaxed Fit | 4–5 inches over body measurement | Visibly roomier; falls away from the body | Rarely — this fit is intended to be generous |
| Oversized | 6+ inches over body measurement | Intentionally large; meant to be worn as a style choice | Only if you want a more dramatic oversized look |
A slim-fit kurta in a 36-inch garment bust on a 36-inch body will pull. A relaxed-fit kurta in a 42-inch garment bust on that same 36-inch body will hang shapeless. Neither mistake is about the size number — it’s about misreading which fit type was intended. The difference between tight fit and structured fit changes how you read these numbers entirely.
How Fabric Stretch Changes the Size You Should Order
Non-stretch woven fabrics — pure cotton, linen, georgette, rayon — have zero give. The garment measurement is the garment measurement. If the chart says 36 inches and your body is 36 inches, the fabric will not accommodate the extra volume you generate when sitting, bending, or raising your arms. Always add a minimum of 2 inches before selecting a size in woven fabrics.
Stretch fabrics — jersey, spandex blends, rib-knit cotton — give back. Stretch fabrics can often accommodate body measurements larger than the garment measurement, depending on fabric composition and how well the stretch recovers after wear. Many Indian brands don’t label stretch percentage explicitly. Practical check: if the fabric content includes elastane, spandex, or lycra, it stretches. If it says 100% cotton, 100% linen, or 100% rayon, it doesn’t. Knowing how to read fabric labels lets you make this call in under 10 seconds at the product page.
Reading Size Charts for Specific Garment Types
Kurtis and Ethnic Tops
Many kurti size charts prioritise chest/bust and length measurements, though some brands also provide waist and hip measurements — particularly for fitted or semi-fitted silhouettes. Where waist and hip measurements are given, always use them. Where they are not, the silhouette is typically A-line or straight and fits loose below the bust, so focus entirely on the chest measurement and add 2 inches minimum for a regular fit in cotton. Length matters: a 44-inch kurti hits mid-calf on a 5’4″ frame — check how the brand’s model photo shows the hemline and compare their listed model height to yours.
Dresses and Maxi Dresses
Fitted dresses are sized for bust, waist, and hips simultaneously. If your measurements fall across two sizes — 36-inch bust (size M) and 40-inch hips (size L) — size up to L and use a belt or tuck at the waist. Trying to squeeze the hips into M will create horizontal pull lines across the seat, which makes the dress look smaller and more body-conscious than intended.
Trousers, Palazzos, and Co-ord Set Bottoms
For trousers without an elasticated waist, the hip measurement is your primary sizing anchor — not the waist. Waistbands can be taken in; hips cannot. If the hip measurement on the size chart is less than your actual hip measurement, the trousers will not pass your hips regardless of what the waist number says. Co-ord sets present a specific sizing challenge because both pieces must fit simultaneously — if the set is not offered in separates, always size to the larger measurement.
Common Sizing Mistakes That Cause Returns
Mistake 1: Ordering by Past Label Memory
Situation: Switching to a new brand after years of ordering M from a familiar label.
Trigger: “I always wear M” — treating a size label as a permanent identity.
Wrong action: Ordering M without checking the new brand’s size chart.
Visible consequence: The kurta pulls at the bust and creates horizontal stress lines across the chest, or floats shapeless on the shoulders.
Fix: Measure before every new brand. Your body doesn’t change its measurements based on which brand you’re buying from — but their M does.
Mistake 2: Comparing Body Measurement to Garment Measurement Directly
Situation: Measuring bust as 38 inches and selecting the size with a 38-inch garment measurement.
Trigger: Not knowing ease allowance exists.
Wrong action: Choosing the “exact match” size in a non-stretch cotton top.
Visible consequence: The top fits like a second skin with no movement. The back rides up every time you raise your arms. Buttons gap at the chest.
Fix: In non-stretch woven fabrics, your garment measurement should be 2–3 inches over your body measurement for regular fit.
Mistake 3: Sizing to the Smallest Measurement and Ignoring the Largest
Situation: A 34-inch bust and 40-inch hip buyer orders size S because “the top half fits.”
Trigger: Model photo shows the garment from the front — the hip and seat don’t appear in the frame.
Wrong action: Sizing to the bust for a fitted dress or co-ord bottom.
Visible consequence: The garment passes the bust but won’t zip past the hips, or if it does, it pulls taut across the seat and thighs.
Fix: Always size to your largest measurement for fitted styles. Adjust or tailor the smaller measurement if needed. A dress that doesn’t fit right at the hips cannot be fixed by going back a size.
The 60-Second Size Check Before You Click “Add to Cart”
- Pull up your five measurements (bust, waist, hips, shoulders, length). Keep them written in your phone notes so you’re not measuring every time.
- Find the brand’s size chart — not the generic guide, the one specific to that product listing. Many brands have different size charts for ethnic wear and Western wear.
- Check which measurements the chart uses. Ethnic tops: match bust only. Dresses and bottoms: match bust AND hips. Trousers: match hips first.
- Identify the fabric type. Non-stretch woven? Add 2 inches. Stretch knit? The chart measurement can be closer to your body measurement.
- Check the fit type (slim, regular, relaxed). If the listing doesn’t say, look at the model photo — does the fabric fall away from the body or follow it?
- If you fall between two sizes, size up — fabric can be taken in by a tailor for under ₹150. A garment that’s too tight cannot be let out.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I measure myself every time I shop online?
Measure once every 6–12 months and store the numbers in your phone. Your measurements don’t change frequently, but brand size charts vary — so comparing your fixed measurements to each new brand’s chart takes 30 seconds and prevents most returns.
What if the size chart says my measurements fall between two sizes?
Size up, always. A slightly larger garment in a non-stretch fabric can be altered at the waist or side seams by a local tailor for ₹100–200. A garment that’s too tight at the hips, bust, or shoulders cannot be fixed without significant reconstruction.
Why does the same size feel so different between Indian ethnic wear and Western clothing?
Indian ethnic wear — kurtis, salwar sets, ethnic co-ords — is typically sized only for the bust, with the rest of the garment cut loose. Western wear is sized for bust and hips simultaneously in a fitted structure. A size L kurti might have 42 inches at the chest with an unstructured waist and hip. A size L fitted trouser at the same brand might require a 38-inch hip to zip up. Read the specific garment’s size chart, not the brand’s generic guide.
Do I need to size up in linen and cotton because of shrinkage?
It depends on whether the garment has been pre-washed. Cotton and linen garments commonly experience some shrinkage after washing, especially if they are not pre-washed or sanforized. For good-quality cotton garments that state pre-washed or sanforized on the label, no extra sizing is needed. For unspecified cotton — especially in kurtis under ₹500 — it’s worth going up half a size to account for shrinkage in length and width. Cotton quality directly affects both how it fits and how it behaves after washing.
Can I trust size charts that only show height and weight?
No. Height and weight charts are the least reliable sizing guide. Two people at the same height and weight can have completely different bust, waist, and hip distributions. Always use the chart that shows actual bust, waist, and hip measurements in inches or centimetres. If a brand only offers a height-weight chart, measure the garment directly from any similar piece you already own and compare.
About the Author
Rajalaxmi Rana is a Delhi-based fashion stylist and Master of Fashion Management graduate from NIFT Delhi. With over six years of hands-on experience styling 150+ clients — from college students to professionals to wedding guests across Delhi NCR — her work focuses on fashion that functions in real life: fits the body correctly, suits the occasion, and holds up outside the trial room.
