In a shared kids’ room, storage is not a luxury, it is survival. The best bunk beds of 2026 do double duty by building drawers, staircases, and shelves into the frame itself, so the floor stays clear and the clutter disappears. We spent time with the leading storage bunks to see which ones actually hold a meaningful amount of stuff and which just add a token drawer to justify a higher price. Here is what earned our recommendation, plus how to pick the storage style that fits your room.
Best Bunk Beds With Storage at a Glance
Max & Lily Bunk Bed with Storage Staircase
- Drawer in every staircase step
- Solid New Zealand pine
- Stairs safer than a ladder
Harper & Bright Designs Bunk Bed with Storage Drawers
- Two large rolling drawers
- Roomy twin-over-full layout
- Wood and MDF blend keeps cost down
Walker Edison Bunk Bed with Under-Bed Storage Drawers
- Solid wood, flush-front drawers
- Modern grown-up look
- Sturdy full-length guardrails
DHP Bunk Bed with Storage Steps and Shelves
- Storage steps plus open shelves
- Lowest price of our picks
- Compact footprint
Storkcraft Caribou Bunk Bed with Storage Drawers
- Two under-bed drawers
- Compact twin-over-twin size
- Solid pine build
Three kinds of built-in storage
Storage bunks fall into three broad camps, and each solves a different problem.
- Under-bed drawers: the most common and most flexible. Two or three drawers roll out from beneath the bottom bunk, giving you dresser-level capacity without a separate dresser. Best when you want maximum volume and do not need stairs.
- Staircase storage: replaces the ladder with steps, and each step is a drawer or cubby. You get storage plus a much safer climb for younger kids. The trade-off is a larger footprint, since the staircase extends off the side or end.
- Shelves and cubbies: open shelving along the side or a bookcase headboard. Lower capacity, but perfect for books, bins, and bedtime essentials the kids reach for themselves.
Drawers vs. stairs: which to choose
If floor space is your tightest constraint, under-bed drawers win because they hide entirely within the bed’s footprint. If you have a young climber, staircase storage is worth the extra floor area because wide steps are dramatically safer than a vertical ladder, and you still gain drawers. Many families end up choosing based on the child’s age: stairs for the under-8 crowd, drawers for older kids and teens.
| Storage type | Capacity | Footprint | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under-bed drawers | High | Smallest | Max storage, older kids |
| Staircase storage | Medium-high | Largest | Young climbers, safety |
| Shelves/cubbies | Low-medium | Small | Books, easy access |
What to check before you buy
Storage adds moving parts, so build quality matters even more than on a plain bunk. We look for drawers on metal or nylon glides rather than bare wood runners, drawer boxes that are stapled and glued rather than just stapled, and solid wood or thick MDF over flimsy particleboard. Confirm the drawers roll on casters if your floor is carpet. And do not forget the fundamentals every bunk needs: full guardrails on the top bunk, gaps under 3.5 inches, and no upper-bunk sleeping for children under 6.
Who these beds are for
Storage bunks are ideal for small bedrooms, shared sibling rooms, and any home short on closet space. If you specifically want the safest climb, prioritize a staircase model and read our roundup of the best bunk beds with stairs. If you are still comparing configurations, start with our main bunk bed guide, and for the largest rooms consider whether an L-shaped bunk gives you a better corner-to-storage layout. Adult siblings sharing a room should also see our adult bunk bed picks.
Do storage drawers on bunk beds hold much?
Yes. Two or three under-bed drawers typically match a small dresser in capacity, easily holding a child’s folded clothes or a season’s worth of toys. Staircase drawers hold less per step but add up across the whole staircase.
Are storage stairs safer than a ladder?
For younger children, yes. Wide, angled steps with handrails are far easier and safer to climb than a vertical rung ladder, and you gain drawer storage in the same footprint. The trade-off is that stairs take more floor space.
Will the drawers work on carpet?
Only if they ride on casters or smooth glides. Drawers with bare wooden runners drag badly on carpet. Check the product details and favor models with rolling casters if your room is carpeted.
Can I add storage to a bunk bed I already own?
Often yes. Rolling under-bed storage bins or low drawer units slide beneath most bottom bunks, giving you similar capacity without buying a new bed. Measure the clearance under the bottom rail first.
Do storage bunks come in twin-over-full?
Several do, including twin-over-full models with under-bed drawers. This gives you the larger bottom bunk plus hidden storage, which is a strong combination for a growing child or a shared room.