Bunk Beds

Best Loft Beds with Stairs in 2026: Safer, Sturdier Picks with Built-In Storage

Best Loft Beds with Stairs in 2026: Safer, Sturdier Picks with Built-In Storage
We independently research every product. When you buy through links on this page — including as an Amazon Associate — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Learn more.

A loft bed with stairs is the upgrade every parent secretly wants once they’ve watched a kid fumble up a thin metal ladder in the dark. Stairs are simply easier and safer to climb, and the good ones in 2026 double their footprint as drawers, cubbies and shelves — reclaiming the exact floor space a bulky loft seems to steal. After climbing, shaking and loading up a range of stair-equipped lofts, these are the picks that earn the extra money over a ladder.

Below is the shortlist, followed by a buying guide on stair safety, storage, weight capacity, room fit and the trade-offs stairs bring versus a ladder.

The Best Loft Beds with Stairs at a Glance

1
Best overall

Max & Lily Twin Loft Bed with Staircase

★★★★½ 4.7
The staircase treads are wide and flat enough that a young kid climbs them like real stairs instead of scrambling, and each step doubles as a drawer. The solid New Zealand pine frame barely flexes when you shake the top rail, which is more than you can say for most metal lofts.
Best for: Most kids' rooms that want solid wood and real stairs
  • Wide, flat treads that feel like stairs
  • Built-in storage drawers in the steps
  • Solid pine barely wobbles
  • Staircase eats more floor space than a ladder
  • Assembly is a long afternoon
Check price$$$on Amazon
2
Best for storage

Harper & Bright Designs Twin Loft Bed with Storage Staircase

★★★★½ 4.5
Between the drawered steps, the under-bed cubbies and the side shelf, this thing swallows an entire dresser's worth of stuff. The staircase runs up the end rather than the side, which keeps the footprint tighter against a wall.
Best for: Small rooms that need every cubic inch
  • Enormous combined storage capacity
  • End-mounted stairs save wall space
  • Guardrails on all top sides
  • Composite wood, not solid
  • Drawers glide better after waxing the runners
Check price$$on Amazon
3
Best budget

DHP Miles Metal Loft Bed with Stairs

★★★★☆ 4.3
For a metal loft the stairs are surprisingly reassuring — deeper treads than the usual ladder rungs and a full handrail. It's the pick when you want stairs over a ladder but can't justify solid-wood money.
Best for: Outfitting a room without spending big
  • Lowest price with real stairs
  • Full-length handrail
  • Ships flat and fits tight rooms
  • Metal frame creaks under heavier teens
  • No built-in storage
Check price$on Amazon
4
Best for teens and adults

Max & Lily Full Loft Bed with Staircase

★★★★½ 4.6
The full-size top plus a 400-pound-plus rating means an adult can actually sleep up here without the frame protesting. Same confidence-inspiring staircase as its twin sibling, just scaled up, and the extra clearance underneath fits a proper desk or reading nook.
Best for: Older kids, teens and adults who want a full-size sleep space
  • Full mattress size sleeps adults
  • High weight capacity
  • Solid pine construction
  • Large footprint
  • Premium price
Check price$$$on Amazon
5
Best for younger kids

Storkcraft Long Horn Twin Loft Bed with Stairs

★★★★☆ 4.4
This one sits a little lower than a full-height loft, so a younger kid isn't as high off the floor and the stairs are shorter and less daunting. The rounded edges and tall guardrails are clearly built with smaller sleepers in mind.
Best for: First loft for a 6-to-10-year-old
  • Lower height suits younger kids
  • Rounded, kid-safe edges
  • Under-bed play or storage space
  • Less headroom underneath
  • Twin only
Check price$$on Amazon
6
Best for a workstation

Walker Edison Twin Metal Loft Bed with Stairs and Desk

★★★★☆ 4.3
The stairs lead up to the sleep deck while a full-width desk tucks underneath, turning a tiny bedroom into a bedroom-plus-office. The industrial metal look reads older than most kids' lofts, so it grows with a tween into the teen years.
Best for: Students who need a desk under the bed
  • Integrated desk maximizes small rooms
  • Grown-up industrial styling
  • Stairs safer than the usual ladder
  • Metal can rattle if bolts loosen
  • Desk clearance is snug for tall users
Check price$$on Amazon

Stairs vs. a ladder: what you’re really paying for

Ladders are cheaper and take up almost no floor space, but they demand two hands and a bit of coordination — not ideal for a five-year-old or a midnight bathroom trip. Stairs let a kid walk up facing forward, holding a rail, often carrying a stuffed animal. The catch is footprint: a staircase adds roughly 2 to 3 feet at one end of the bed. That’s the central trade you’re weighing, and it’s why measuring your room comes first.

Stair safety: treads, rise and handrails

Not all “stairs” are equal. The best have wide, flat treads deep enough for a whole foot, a consistent rise between steps, and a continuous handrail on at least one side. Cheap versions are really just angled rungs with a landing — better than a vertical ladder, but not by much. When we test, we look for treads a small foot lands squarely on and a handrail a child can actually reach. The Max & Lily staircase is the benchmark here; the metal DHP is a respectable budget version of the idea.

Storage stairs: the space you get back

The best reason to accept the larger footprint is that the stairs give the space back as storage. Drawered steps hold folded clothes, toys or bedding, and many lofts add cubbies or a side shelf on top of that. On a small-room project, a storage staircase can replace a whole dresser — net floor space can actually come out ahead of a dresser-plus-ladder-loft setup.

Storage type Typical capacity Best for
Drawered steps 3–4 drawers Folded clothes, bedding
Under-bed cubbies Open shelving Books, bins, toys
Side shelf/bookcase 2–3 shelves Bedside items, decor
Under-bed clearance Desk or play zone Homework or floor play

Weight capacity and who’s sleeping up there

Most kids’ lofts are rated around 200 pounds, which is plenty for a child but not for an adult who wants to lie down and read with them. If a teen or adult will use it, step up to a full-size loft with a 400-pound-plus rating like the Max & Lily full. Also check the staircase rating separately — the treads and drawers carry real load every time someone climbs.

Room fit and ceiling height

Measure two things: the floor footprint including the stair run, and your ceiling height. A full-height loft with a desk underneath needs about 6 feet of clearance above the sleep deck so a kid can sit up in bed. If your ceilings are standard 8 feet, that’s fine; in a basement or attic room, choose a lower-profile loft like the Storkcraft.

Wood vs. metal: which stair loft lasts

Material shapes both the feel and the lifespan. Solid-wood lofts like the Max & Lily are the quiet, sturdy choice — the frame absorbs movement instead of transmitting it, so an active sleeper up top doesn’t broadcast every turn to the room. They cost more and weigh a lot to assemble. Metal lofts are lighter, cheaper and quicker to move, but they rely entirely on tight bolts; let a few loosen and you’ll hear it. For a younger child who’ll use the bed for years, wood is the better long-term value. For a short-term room, a college apartment, or a strict budget, quality metal does the job. Composite-wood lofts sit in between — they look like solid wood and hold storage well, but they don’t shrug off heavy use the way real pine does.

What goes under the bed

The whole point of a loft over a bunk is that the space underneath is yours to design. A desk turns the footprint into a study zone; open shelving or a small dresser makes it a storage wall; a beanbag and a rug make a reading nook a kid will actually use. Measure the vertical clearance under the sleep deck before you commit to a desk — a tall student needs headroom to sit up straight, and the desk-integrated lofts can be snug. If you want the flexibility to change the layout later, pick a loft with an open bay rather than a fixed built-in desk.

How to size the mattress and bedding

Stair lofts take the same low-profile mattress rules as bunks: keep it to roughly 6 to 8 inches so the guardrail retains at least 5 inches of clearance. Making the bed up top is genuinely harder than on a normal bed, so fitted sheets with deep-pocket elastic and a comforter rather than a duvet-plus-cover save a lot of grief. A mattress that ships compressed is a blessing here — you carry a manageable box up, not a floppy full-size mattress up a staircase.

Comparison table: loft beds with stairs at a glance

Model Best for Material Size(s) Price
Max & Lily Twin Staircase Overall Solid pine Twin $$$
Harper & Bright Storage Storage Composite wood Twin $$
DHP Miles Budget Metal Twin $
Max & Lily Full Staircase Teens/adults Solid pine Full $$$
Storkcraft Long Horn Younger kids Wood Twin $$
Walker Edison Stairs + Desk Workstation Metal Twin $$

Assembly and long-term care

A stair loft is a multi-hour build with a lot of bolts, and the single most important maintenance habit is re-tightening every bolt after the first two weeks — new wood and metal settle, and a loose loft is a wobbly loft. Wax drawer runners if they stick, and keep the mattress to the profile the frame specifies so the guardrails keep their clearance.

If a staircase footprint is too big for your room, a standard loft bed with a ladder may fit better, or consider a bunk bed with stairs if you need two sleeping spots. For a work-from-bedroom setup also see the bunk bed with desk options. Shopping for younger children? Our best kids’ beds and toddler beds guides help you size up. Don’t forget a low-profile mattress — the best bunk bed mattresses apply to lofts too — and you can read our vetting process on the how we test page.

Ready to climb the stairs?

Our top pick pairs real stairs with drawered steps and a rock-solid pine frame.

Check price on Amazon

Are loft beds with stairs safer than ladders?

Generally yes for younger kids. Stairs let a child walk up facing forward with a handrail, which is more secure than a vertical ladder that needs two hands and coordination. The trade-off is that stairs take more floor space.

How much extra floor space do the stairs need?

Plan for roughly 2 to 3 feet of run at one end or side of the bed. End-mounted staircases keep the bed tight against a wall and use space more efficiently in narrow rooms.

Can adults use a loft bed with stairs?

Yes, if you choose a full-size loft rated around 400 pounds or more, like the Max & Lily full. Standard kids’ twin lofts are usually rated near 200 pounds and aren’t meant for adults.

How much ceiling height do I need?

For a full-height loft with a desk underneath, aim for about 6 feet of clearance above the sleep deck so the sleeper can sit up. Standard 8-foot ceilings handle this; low basement or attic rooms suit a lower loft.

Do the stairs really add storage?

The best ones do. Drawered steps plus under-bed cubbies and side shelves can replace an entire dresser, which often makes a stair loft a net space saver in a small room.

What mattress height works on a loft bed?

Stick to a low-profile mattress, typically 6 to 8 inches, so the top guardrail keeps at least 5 inches of clearance above the sleep surface. See our bunk mattress guide, which applies to lofts.

Is a metal or wood loft with stairs better?

Solid wood is sturdier and quieter under heavier sleepers, while metal is lighter, cheaper and easier to move. For adults or teens, wood is the safer bet; for a budget kids’ room, quality metal works.

How do I keep a stair loft from wobbling?

Re-tighten every bolt after the first two weeks of use and periodically after that. New frames settle as they’re used, and a wobble almost always traces back to a bolt that’s worked loose.

Sophie Laurent
Written by

Sophie Laurent

Beds & Bedroom Editor

Sophie Laurent is TalkBeds' Beds & Bedroom Editor. With more than ten years covering home and furniture, she leads everything on the site that isn't the mattress itself: bed frames, platform beds, headboards, bunk and kids' beds, sizing, and the interiors decisions… Full profile & sources →