It’s one of the most common bed-math questions we get, and the short answer surprises people: two Twin XL mattresses pushed together make a split king (76 x 80 inches), which matches a standard king. But two regular twin mattresses do not add up to a standard king. The difference comes down to length, and it changes which setup actually works for you. Here’s the full breakdown for 2026.
The quick answer
- Two Twin XL mattresses = a split king (76 x 80 in), the same footprint as a standard king.
- Two regular twin mattresses = 76 x 75 in, which is king-width but 5 inches too short. It does not equal a standard king.
That 5-inch length gap is the whole story. Twin XL adds length (80 inches instead of 75), and length is what a king needs.
The dimensions, side by side
| Setup | Combined size | Equals a standard king? |
|---|---|---|
| Two Twin XL mattresses | 76 x 80 in | Yes, this is a split king |
| Two regular Twin mattresses | 76 x 75 in | No, 5 inches too short |
| Standard King (for reference) | 76 x 80 in | Baseline |
| California King (for reference) | 72 x 84 in | Narrower and longer, not the same |
So if your goal is to recreate a king out of two smaller mattresses, you specifically need Twin XL, not standard twin. For the full chart of every mattress size, see our bed sizes and dimensions guide.
Why a split king (two Twin XLs) is so useful
The split king isn’t just a workaround, it’s genuinely the better choice in a few situations.
Adjustable beds
This is the big one. Most adjustable bases in king size are actually split kings under the hood, two independent Twin XL platforms side by side. That lets each partner raise their head, elevate their legs, or set their own firmness without disturbing the other. If you want a king-sized adjustable setup, you almost always want a split king. Our best adjustable beds guide walks through how split-king bases work in practice.
Guest rooms and flexible sleeping
Two Twin XL mattresses can be pushed together for couples or separated into two single beds for guests. That flexibility makes them a favorite for guest rooms, vacation rentals, and multi-use spaces. You get a king when you need it and two singles when you don’t.
Partners with different needs
Because each side is its own mattress, one partner can have a firm feel while the other has something plush, and neither feels the other’s movement. It’s a quiet, low-compromise way to share a bed.
When two regular twins are fine anyway
If you’re not trying to match a king exactly, two standard twins pushed together still give you a wide 76-inch sleeping surface, just at a shorter 75-inch length. For shorter sleepers or a kids’ shared room, that can be perfectly comfortable. The catch is bedding: king sheets will be 5 inches too long, so you’d shop for the specific combined size or use two twin fitted sheets.
The bedding gotcha
Whichever route you take, the seam in the middle is real. A split king or two-twin setup has a gap where the mattresses meet. A bed bridge (a foam wedge) plus a king-size mattress topper smooths it into one surface. For a true split king on an adjustable base, look for split-king sheet sets that keep the fitted sheets separate so the base can still bend independently.
Bottom line
Two Twin XL mattresses make a split king that matches a standard king (76 x 80 in). Two regular twins fall 5 inches short. If you want king-sized flexibility, especially on an adjustable base, buy Twin XL. If you just want a wide shared surface and don’t need king-exact bedding, two standard twins will do. Either way, confirm the numbers against our full bed sizes and dimensions guide before you order sheets.