The best four bunk beds solve one of the hardest problems in a busy home: sleeping four kids — or a whole cabin bunkroom — in the smallest possible footprint. In 2026 you have two real routes to a quad setup: a purpose-built double-decker that stacks four berths in one integrated frame, or a matched pair of two-person bunks arranged side by side or in an L. Below are our tested picks for both approaches, followed by a complete buying guide covering configurations, safety, sizing, weight limits, and the assembly reality of building beds for four.
The Best Four Bunk Beds at a Glance
Max & Lily Quad Bunk Bed (Two Twin-over-Twin Units)
- Solid New Zealand pine, not particleboard, so it holds up to years of climbing
- Full-length guardrails on both top bunks meet safety spacing
- Configures as two bunks or four separate beds as kids grow
- Heavy and time-consuming to assemble — plan a half day
- Takes the footprint of two twin bunks, not one
Harper & Bright Designs Quad Bunk Bed
- Compact quad footprint fits four in a small room
- Shared ladder and integrated design save floor space
- Guardrails on all upper berths
- Central ladder means top sleepers share a climb path
- Assembly instructions could be clearer
DHP Metal Quad Bunk (Twin-over-Twin Pair)
- Most affordable way to sleep four
- Steel frame is durable and easy to wipe clean
- Low profile fits under 8-foot ceilings
- Metal can rattle if bolts loosen over time
- Firmer, more utilitarian look than wood
Storkcraft Long Horn Quad Bunk (Two Bunks + Trundle Ready)
- Trundle-ready to add extra sleeping spots
- Solid wood with a warm, classic finish
- Splits into four standalone twin beds later
- Trundles sold separately add to the cost
- Heavier solid-wood pieces need two people to build
Walker Edison Full-over-Full Quad Bunk (Pair)
- Full-size berths fit teens and adults comfortably
- Higher weight rating suits older sleepers
- Two can share each berth in a pinch — sleeps up to eight
- Full-over-full takes significantly more floor space
- Tall assembly benefits from a step stool
Novogratz Metal Quad Bunk with Modern Finish
- Modern matte finish elevates a shared room
- Coordinated pair looks intentional, not thrown together
- Great for photogenic vacation rentals
- Metal frames can feel cold without bedding
- Twin berths only
Two ways to sleep four
Before you shop, decide which quad configuration fits your room, because they behave very differently.
Purpose-built quad (double-decker)
A single integrated frame that stacks four berths — usually two-over-two in an L or side-by-side arrangement with a shared ladder. This is the true space-saver: it eats the least floor and looks the most intentional. The trade is a fixed layout and a taller, more complex assembly. The Harper & Bright quad is this type.
Matched pair of bunks
Two standard twin-over-twin (or full-over-full) bunks placed together. This is the more flexible and often sturdier route — each unit is a proven design, they usually split into four standalone beds as kids grow, and you can add trundles. The trade is a larger footprint than a single integrated quad. Most of our picks — Max & Lily, DHP, Storkcraft, Walker Edison, Novogratz — take this approach because it holds up better long-term.
Safety first — this matters more with four kids
With four sleepers and two upper berths, safety is non-negotiable. Every upper bunk needs continuous guardrails on all open sides, with the gap between the guardrail and mattress top no more than 3.5 inches so a child can’t slip through. The guardrail should rise at least 5 inches above the mattress surface. The ladder must be securely anchored, not just leaned. Follow the standard guidance that children under 6 shouldn’t sleep on a top bunk, and anchor the whole assembly to the wall — a taller, wider quad has more leverage to tip. Our main bunk beds guide covers the full US safety standard in detail.
Sizing and room fit
Quad setups demand ceiling and floor planning. Purpose-built quads go up; matched pairs go out.
| Configuration | Sleeps | Approx. floor footprint | Ceiling needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Integrated quad (2×2) | 4 | ~80″ x 80″ | 8 ft+ |
| Two twin-over-twin bunks | 4 | ~80″ x 120″ | 7.5 ft+ |
| Two full-over-full bunks | 4–8 | ~112″ x 120″ | 8 ft+ |
| Bunks + trundles | 5–6 | ~80″ x 130″ | 7.5 ft+ |
For low-ceiling rooms, our low bunk beds guide helps, and for teen and adult sleepers see bunk beds for adults. The twin-over-full and triple bunk guides cover in-between family sizes.
Comparison table
| Model | Best for | Material | Configuration | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Max & Lily Quad | Overall | Solid pine | Two twin/twin | $$$ |
| Harper & Bright Quad | Space-saver | Wood + metal | Integrated quad | $$$ |
| DHP Metal Pair | Budget | Steel | Two twin/twin | $$ |
| Storkcraft Long Horn | Growing families | Solid wood | Two twin + trundle | $$$ |
| Walker Edison Full/Full | Older kids/teens | Wood | Two full/full | $$$ |
| Novogratz Metal Quad | Design | Steel | Two twin/twin | $$ |
Weight capacity and materials
Weight rating matters more with four sleepers because top berths take real abuse from climbing and horseplay. Solid wood (pine, poplar) is the sturdiest and quietest but heaviest and priciest — the Max & Lily and Storkcraft picks. Steel is lighter, cheaper, and wipe-clean, but can develop a rattle as bolts loosen; re-torque them every few months. For teens and adults, insist on a per-berth rating of at least 250 pounds on the upper and 400+ on the lower, which the full-over-full Walker Edison pick delivers. Avoid particleboard on any load-bearing joint in a four-sleeper bed — it won’t survive years of climbing.
Mattresses for a quad setup
You’ll need four mattresses, so cost adds up — buy thin enough that guardrails still clear safely. A 6-to-8-inch mattress is ideal for top bunks so the guardrail keeps its safe margin; you can go thicker on the bottom berths. Our bunk bed mattress guide covers the right profiles, and value options in the under-$300 mattress guide keep four-mattress budgets sane.
Assembly reality
Building beds for four is a project. Purpose-built quads are the most complex — plan a half day and two people, and follow the bolt-torque sequence exactly so nothing racks. Matched pairs are effectively two assemblies back to back. Whatever you choose, anchor everything to the wall, keep the ladder path clear, and re-check bolts after the first month once the wood or metal has settled. For more configurations, browse our bunks with stairs, L-shaped bunks, and loft beds, and read how we test.
Ready to sleep all four?
Our overall winner pairs solid-wood durability with safe guardrails and a layout that grows with your kids.
Check price on AmazonWhat exactly is a four bunk bed?
It’s any setup that sleeps four in a bunk configuration — either a single integrated quad frame stacking four berths, or a matched pair of two-person bunks arranged side by side or in an L. Both sleep four; the integrated quad saves the most floor space.
Are four bunk beds safe for kids?
Yes, when they meet standard bunk safety: continuous guardrails on all open sides of upper berths (gap under 3.5 inches), a securely anchored ladder, no children under 6 on top bunks, and the whole frame anchored to the wall. Taller quads especially need wall anchoring.
How much space does a four bunk setup need?
An integrated quad fits roughly an 80×80-inch footprint but needs an 8-foot ceiling. Two twin-over-twin bunks spread wider — about 80×120 inches — but fit lower ceilings. Full-over-full pairs need the most floor of all.
Should I buy an integrated quad or two separate bunks?
Integrated quads save the most floor space and look intentional but have a fixed layout. Matched pairs are usually sturdier, split into four standalone beds as kids grow, and can add trundles. Most families are better served by a quality matched pair.
What weight can four bunk beds hold?
Look for at least 250 pounds per upper berth and 400+ per lower for kids; more for teens and adults. Solid wood and steel handle this well — avoid particleboard on any load-bearing joint.
What size mattresses do I need?
Four mattresses total. Use 6-to-8-inch profiles on top berths so guardrails keep a safe margin; bottom berths can go thicker. Twin fits standard quads; full-over-full pairs take full mattresses for teens and adults.
Can a four bunk setup sleep more than four?
Yes — trundle-ready bunks add a fifth or sixth spot underneath, and full-over-full berths can each hold two in a pinch, sleeping up to eight. Great for cabins and vacation rentals.
How hard is assembly?
It’s a real project — plan a half day and two people, especially for integrated quads. Follow the bolt-torque sequence, anchor to the wall, and re-check every bolt after the first month once the frame settles.