Shopping for a king bed in 2026 quickly reveals there isn’t one king — there are several genuinely different king size beds, each solving a different problem. Standard king, California king, split king, storage king, and platform styles all wear the same name but fit different rooms, sleepers, and budgets. We’ve handled the frames below to sort out which “king” is actually right for you, matched to the sleeper who benefits most. Whichever direction you lean, the goal is the same: get the extra 16 inches of width a king gives each partner without buying the wrong shape for your space.
The Best King Size Beds at a Glance
Zinus Alexis Deluxe Wood Platform King Bed Frame
- Slats close enough to skip a box spring
- Real under-bed storage clearance
- Quiet — no squeak once bolts are snug
- No headboard included
- Wood tone runs lighter than product photos
Novilla California King Platform Bed Frame with Headboard
- Full 84-inch Cal King length for tall sleepers
- Padded headboard is genuinely comfortable
- Steel-reinforced center rail feels solid
- Cal King sheets are harder to find than standard
- Heavier to move than a slat-only frame
Lucid L300 Split King Adjustable Bed Base
- Independent head and foot adjustment per side
- USB ports on both sides
- Quiet motor won't wake a partner
- Requires two Twin XL mattresses, not one king
- Premium price versus a static frame
Allewie King Platform Bed Frame with Storage Drawers
- Four roomy under-bed drawers
- Tall headboard doubles as a backrest
- No box spring needed
- Drawers only open on chosen side — plan placement
- Assembly takes about two hours
Yaheetech King Metal Platform Bed Frame
- Very affordable for a king
- 13 inches of under-bed clearance
- Fast, tool-light assembly
- No headboard
- Bare metal look is utilitarian
Vecelo King Upholstered Platform Bed with Wingback Headboard
- Statement wingback headboard
- Upholstery resists visible wear
- No box spring required
- Light fabric shows pet hair
- Headboard height needs ceiling clearance
The different types of king beds, explained
Before the picks, it helps to know what separates each king variant. They differ in dimensions, in how the base works, and in what they’re best at.
Standard (Eastern) King
The default: 76″ wide by 80″ long. The widest common bed, giving two sleepers a full 38 inches each. If your room is 12′ x 12′ or larger and no one is exceptionally tall, this is the king you want. Our top pick, the Zinus Alexis, is a standard king.
California King
Narrower but longer — 72″ wide by 84″ long. The Cal King trades 4 inches of width for 4 inches of length, making it the choice for sleepers over about 6’2″. The trade-off: Cal King sheets and bedding are less widely stocked, so budget a little extra for linens.
Split King
Two Twin XL mattresses (each 38″ x 80″) side by side, equaling an exact standard king. The magic is independence: on an adjustable split-king base, each partner raises their own head and feet. It’s also the answer for couples who disagree on mattress firmness — see can you put two twin beds together for the full breakdown.
Storage & platform kings
These describe the frame, not the mattress size. Storage kings add under-bed drawers — a lifesaver in rooms without a closet. Platform kings use closely spaced slats so you skip the box spring entirely, sitting lower and cleaner. Both are standard-king width unless labeled otherwise.
How to choose the right king for your room
Start with two measurements: your room and your height. A king needs at least a 12′ x 12′ room to leave walking clearance around all sides — measure before you commit, because the frame and headboard add inches beyond the mattress. If anyone sharing the bed is over 6’2″, lean California king for the length. If you co-sleep with kids or pets, or want independent adjustability, split king is worth the premium. Short on storage? A drawer frame earns its keep. For the room-by-room math, our king vs queen comparison and bed sizes guide spell out clearances.
Comparison table
| Model | Best for | King type | Size | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zinus Alexis Deluxe | Most bedrooms | Standard platform | 76″ x 80″ | $$ |
| Novilla California King | Tall sleepers | California king | 72″ x 84″ | $$ |
| Lucid L300 | Adjustable couples | Split king base | 2x 38″ x 80″ | $$$ |
| Allewie Storage | Small masters | Storage king | 76″ x 80″ | $$$ |
| Yaheetech Metal | Tight budgets | Standard metal | 76″ x 80″ | $ |
| Vecelo Wingback | Style-first buyers | Upholstered platform | 76″ x 80″ | $$ |
Materials: platform, metal, and upholstered
Wood platform frames (like the Zinus) run quiet and hold storage bins underneath. Metal frames (Yaheetech) are the budget and clearance champions but look utilitarian and can squeak if bolts loosen — snug them every few months. Upholstered frames (Vecelo, Allewie) bring style and a padded headboard you can lean against, at the cost of showing pet hair and needing occasional spot-cleaning. Match the material to whether you prioritize price, storage, or looks.
Assembly and what to expect on delivery day
Every frame here ships flat-packed and bolts together with an included tool, but the effort varies. The metal Yaheetech is the quickest — under 30 minutes, no headboard to wrangle. Platform frames with headboards (Zinus, Vecelo) run closer to an hour for one person; keep the headboard bolts finger-tight until the whole frame is squared, then torque them down so nothing sits crooked. Storage frames like the Allewie take the longest at around two hours because of the drawer assemblies, and they’re a genuine two-person lift once built. The split-king Lucid base arrives as two heavy sections and needs floor space to unfold, plus a nearby outlet for each side. Whatever you choose, unbox in the room where the bed will live — a fully built king is awkward to carry through a doorway.
Do you need a box spring?
For every platform pick here, no. The slats are spaced closely enough to support a foam, hybrid, or spring mattress directly — the mattress warranty is satisfied and you save the cost and height of a box spring. Only traditional metal bed-frame-plus-headboard setups with widely spaced supports need a foundation. If you’re pairing a new mattress, our best bed frames guide notes which need a foundation and which don’t.
Mistakes to avoid when buying a king
- Skipping the room measurement. A king that fits wall-to-wall leaves no walking space — always check for 24–30″ of clearance per side.
- Assuming all kings are the same length. A standard king is 80″; a Cal King is 84″. Buy for the tallest sleeper.
- Buying the wrong bedding. Cal King and split king need their own specific sheets — standard king sets won’t fit right.
- Forgetting doorway and stair clearance. A king mattress is a big object to move; confirm it’ll get to the room before it arrives.
Our verdict
For most buyers, the Zinus Alexis Deluxe standard platform king is the sweet spot — quiet, storage-friendly, and no box spring needed. Tall sleepers should go California king with the Novilla, couples who want independence should invest in the Lucid split-king base, and anyone tight on space or budget is well served by the Allewie storage frame or the Yaheetech metal frame. Explore matching frames in our king-size bed frame and best platform beds roundups, or step up the base with an adjustable bed frame.
Find your king
Our top overall pick, the Zinus Alexis, delivers a quiet, box-spring-free standard king at a fair price.
Check price on AmazonWhat are the different types of king size beds?
The main types are Standard (Eastern) King at 76″ x 80″, California King at 72″ x 84″, and Split King (two Twin XLs). Beyond size, frames come as platform, storage, upholstered, and adjustable styles.
What is the difference between a king and a California king?
A standard king is 76″ wide by 80″ long. A California king is narrower at 72″ but longer at 84″, making it better for tall sleepers who need the extra length.
What is a split king bed?
A split king is two Twin XL mattresses (each 38″ x 80″) placed side by side to equal a standard king. It lets each partner choose their own mattress firmness or, on an adjustable base, raise their head and feet independently.
Do king beds need a box spring?
Most modern platform king frames don’t — their slats are spaced closely enough to support the mattress directly. Only frames with widely spaced supports require a box spring or foundation.
What size room do I need for a king bed?
At least 12′ x 12′, ideally 13′ x 13′, to leave 24–30 inches of walking clearance on each side plus room for nightstands.
Which king bed is best for tall people?
A California king, at 84 inches long, gives sleepers over about 6’2″ the extra length a standard 80-inch king lacks.
Can I get a king bed with storage?
Yes. Storage king frames like the Allewie add under-bed drawers that hold off-season bedding — ideal for rooms without much closet space.
Is a split king worth it?
If you and your partner want different mattress firmness or independent adjustable positioning, yes. If you both prefer the same feel and don’t need adjustability, a single standard king mattress is simpler and cheaper.