The best temporary beds in 2026 solve a real problem: you need somewhere for someone to sleep, but not a permanent bed taking up a room. Whether it’s overnight guests, a move-in gap, a college-break visit, or a studio that has to double as a guest room, the right temporary bed sleeps comfortably and then disappears — folded, rolled, deflated, or converted back into a sofa. We set up and slept on the options below, and this guide covers every real decision: which type fits your situation, comfort versus packability, how long “temporary” really is, storage, and the mistakes that leave your guests on a deflated air mattress at 3 a.m. If you host often, our best sofa beds and best day beds guides cover more permanent guest solutions.
The Best Temporary Beds at a Glance
Zinus Folding Steel Frame with Memory Foam Mattress
- Memory foam sleeps genuinely comfortably, not like a cot
- Folds and rolls away for compact storage between uses
- Steel frame keeps the sleeper up off the cold floor
- Heavier and bulkier than an air mattress to move
- Folded footprint still needs real closet or under-bed space
SoundAsleep Dream Series Air Mattress (Queen)
- Built-in pump inflates and deflates in a couple of minutes
- Holds air overnight far better than budget air beds
- Packs flat into a bag for the smallest storage footprint
- Air can feel cooler underneath in a cold room
- Vinyl surface needs a fitted sheet or topper to feel bed-like
Milliard Diplomat Folding Rollaway Bed with Memory Foam
- Rolls out ready to sleep, no setup or inflation
- Locking casters keep it from sliding on hard floors
- Folds vertically to store in a slim closet gap
- Thinner foam than a full mattress, firmer feel
- Twin-ish width sleeps one, not a couple
DHP Emily Convertible Futon Sofa Bed
- Doubles as a real sofa, saving floor space full-time
- Split-back reclines independently for lounging or sleeping
- No inflation or rollaway storage needed at all
- Firmer, flatter sleep surface than a dedicated mattress
- Full-size sleep width is snug for two adults
Coleman Camping Cot with Air Mattress and Side Table
- Elevated cot keeps the sleeper off cold or damp ground
- Included air mattress adds real cushioning over bare canvas
- Packs into a carry bag for camping, moves, or overflow
- Narrower cot width sleeps one person only
- Canvas-and-frame feel is more utilitarian than a mattress
Novogratz Brittany Sleeper Sofa with Memory Foam
- Stylish sofa look works full-time in a living space
- Memory foam sleeps better than a standard thin sleeper pad
- Pull-out mechanism operates smoothly one-handed
- Heaviest and priciest of our picks
- Permanent furniture, not something you pack away
Which type of temporary bed do you need?
“Temporary bed” covers several very different products, and picking the wrong type is the main way people end up disappointed. The right choice depends on how often you’ll use it, how much you’ll move it, and how much comfort your guests expect.
| Type | Best for | Comfort | Packability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Folding frame + foam | Real-bed feel for guests | High | Folds, moderate |
| Air mattress | Occasional, packable | Medium | Packs flat, best |
| Rollaway bed | Frequent guest use | Medium-high | Rolls, folds upright |
| Futon / sofa bed | Dual-purpose small spaces | Medium | Stays as furniture |
| Cot | Travel, camping, overflow | Medium | Packs to a bag, best |
Comfort vs. packability: the core trade-off
Every temporary bed sits somewhere on a line between “sleeps like a real bed” and “packs into nothing.” A folding foam bed or rollaway leans comfort — a proper foam surface on a frame that keeps the sleeper off the cold floor — but takes up real storage space folded. An air mattress or cot leans packability — it collapses into a bag on a shelf — but sleeps firmer, cooler, and less like a bed. A futon or sofa bed sidesteps storage entirely by being furniture you already use, at the cost of a flatter sleep surface. Decide which end of that line matters more for your situation before you shop.
How long is “temporary”?
Match the bed to the actual duration.
- A night or two, once in a while: an air mattress or cot is perfect — cheap, packable, good enough for a short stay.
- Regular weekend guests: a rollaway or folding foam bed pays off, since setup is instant and the sleep quality holds up over repeat visits.
- Weeks or months (a move-in gap, a long visit, a temporary bedroom): step up to a futon, sofa bed, or even a Murphy bed — anything a guest sleeps on for weeks needs to feel close to a real mattress.
- A room that’s always sometimes-a-guest-room: a sleeper chair, sofa bed, or trundle bed that lives there full-time is the cleanest answer.
Comfort tips that make any temporary bed better
The single biggest upgrade is a topper. A one- or two-inch foam mattress topper over an air mattress or thin cot transforms the sleep surface and adds insulation from the cold that seeps up through air and canvas. Always dress a temporary bed with a real fitted sheet rather than sleeping on bare vinyl — it’s warmer and far more comfortable. For air mattresses specifically, inflate them fully firm; a half-inflated air bed sags in the middle and is the number-one guest complaint. In a cold room, put a blanket under the sleeper on an air bed, not just over them, since air conducts cold.
Storage and setup
Before buying, be honest about where it’ll live between uses. An air mattress and cot pack into a bag on a closet shelf. A folding foam bed rolls under a bed or stands in a closet but needs real space. A rollaway folds upright into a slim gap. A futon or sofa bed doesn’t store at all — it’s out full-time as furniture, which is either the whole point or a dealbreaker depending on your space. Also weigh setup effort: a rollaway or sofa bed deploys in seconds, an air mattress in a couple of minutes with a built-in pump, a folding frame in a minute or two.
Mistakes to avoid
- Buying a cheap air mattress for regular guests. Budget air beds deflate overnight; spend up for one that holds air, or get a rollaway.
- Ignoring storage space. A comfortable folding bed you have nowhere to put is a problem, not a solution.
- Skipping the topper and sheet. Bare vinyl or canvas sleeps cold and cheap; a topper and fitted sheet fix it for a few dollars.
- Under-inflating an air mattress. Fill it fully firm — it softens under body weight and a soft start becomes a sag.
- Choosing packable when you host constantly. If guests come often, prioritize comfort and instant setup over how small it folds.
Care and longevity
Let foam beds and rollaways air out fully before folding them away — trapping moisture invites odor and mildew. Store air mattresses clean, dry, and loosely folded rather than tightly crammed, which stresses the seams that eventually leak. Keep an air mattress away from anything sharp and patch small punctures early with a vinyl repair kit. For futons and sofa beds, rotate and flip the cushion periodically so the sleeping side wears evenly. If your “temporary” solution is becoming permanent, it’s worth reading our best futon guide for a step up in daily comfort.
Comparison table
| Model | Best for | Type | Storage | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zinus Folding Foam Bed | Overall | Folding frame + foam | Folds/rolls away | $$ |
| SoundAsleep Dream Series | Air mattress | Air mattress | Packs flat | $$ |
| Milliard Diplomat | Rollaway | Rollaway | Folds upright | $$ |
| DHP Emily Futon | Dual-purpose | Futon sofa | Stays as furniture | $$ |
| Coleman Cot + Air | Travel/camping | Cot | Packs to a bag | $$ |
| Novogratz Brittany | Guest-room upgrade | Sleeper sofa | Stays as furniture | $$$ |
Each pick earned its spot for sleeping better than its category usually does while still packing away or converting cleanly — see our full process on the how we test page. Hosting more often than you expected? Our best sofa beds and best day beds guides cover comfier full-time options.
Ready for stress-free guests?
Our top temporary-bed pick pairs real memory-foam comfort with fold-away storage.
Check price on AmazonWhat is the most comfortable type of temporary bed?
A folding frame with a memory-foam mattress or a memory-foam rollaway sleeps closest to a real bed, because you get a proper foam surface elevated off the cold floor. Air mattresses are more packable but sleep firmer and cooler; a topper and fitted sheet narrow the gap.
Are air mattresses good for regular guests?
A quality air mattress with a built-in pump is fine for occasional guests, but for frequent use a rollaway or folding foam bed is better because it sets up instantly and doesn’t risk deflating overnight. Cheap air beds are the main source of guest complaints.
How do I make a temporary bed warmer and more comfortable?
Add a foam topper and always use a real fitted sheet instead of sleeping on bare vinyl or canvas. In a cold room, put a blanket under the sleeper as well as over them — air mattresses especially conduct cold from below.
What’s the best temporary bed for a small apartment?
A futon, sofa bed, or sleeper chair is ideal because it’s furniture you use every day that converts to a bed at night, so it takes no extra storage. If you have a closet to spare, a rollaway or folding foam bed is another compact option.
Why does my air mattress feel soft in the morning?
Either it was under-inflated to start, it lost some air overnight, or the room cooled and the air contracted. Always inflate fully firm before bed, and if it consistently deflates, check the seams and valve or upgrade to a model that holds air better.
How long can someone sleep on a temporary bed?
A night or two is fine on almost anything. For stays of a week or more, choose a comfortable option like a foam rollaway, futon, or sofa bed — a thin cot or budget air mattress gets uncomfortable over consecutive nights.
How should I store a temporary bed between uses?
Air it out fully so no moisture is trapped, then store dry. Air mattresses go in their bag loosely folded (not tightly crammed, which stresses seams); folding foam beds roll under a bed or stand in a closet; rollaways fold upright into a slim gap.
Can a sofa bed replace a real guest bed?
For occasional guests, a good sofa bed with memory foam comes close and saves a whole room. For someone staying weeks, it depends on the model — higher-end sleeper sofas with thicker foam are comfortable long-term, while thin standard pull-outs are better for short stays.