A daybed is the most flexible piece of furniture most spare rooms can own. Push it against a wall with some throw pillows and it’s a sofa; pull back the cushions at night and it’s a twin bed. Add a trundle underneath and one twin footprint quietly sleeps two. That versatility is exactly why daybeds have stayed a go-to for guest rooms, kids’ rooms and home offices in 2026.
Here are our current picks, followed by an honest guide to choosing the right frame — and deciding whether you actually need a trundle.
Best Daybeds at a Glance
Max & Lily Solid Wood Twin Daybed with Trundle
- Solid pine, no particleboard
- Includes pop-up-ready trundle
- Fits standard twin mattresses
DHP Manila Metal Daybed with Trundle
- Roll-out trundle sleeps two
- Metal frame resists wobble
- Works as a sofa by day
Novogratz Bright Pop Metal Daybed
- Affordable single-sleeper option
- Fun color choices
- Fits a standard twin mattress
Walker Edison Modern Metal Daybed with Trundle
- Sofa-like daytime look
- Trundle tucks fully out of sight
- Neutral finishes suit an office
Zinus Florence Twin Daybed Frame
- Strong steel-and-slat support
- No box spring needed
- Quiet, wobble-free frame
How we chose
We looked for frames that genuinely do double duty: comfortable and sofa-like by day, stable and quiet as a bed by night. We weighed material quality (solid wood vs. metal vs. particleboard), how smoothly any trundle rolls and locks, weight support, and whether the back and side rails sit at a height that’s actually comfortable to lean against.
Twin daybed with optional trundle
Nearly all daybeds take a standard twin mattress on the main frame. The optional extra is the trundle — a second mattress platform on wheels that stores underneath and pulls out when you need a second bed. Roll-out trundles sit low to the floor; pop-up trundles rise on a scissor mechanism to match the main mattress height and can even push together into a larger surface. If you want the full breakdown, see our guide to trundle beds.
Seating by day, bed by night
The daytime-sofa role is what separates a daybed from a plain twin frame. For it to work as seating, you want a back rail (or a wall to lean pillows against) and a mattress that isn’t too tall — a low-profile mattress plus bolster pillows gives the best couch feel. Metal daybeds tend to look more sofa-like out of the box; solid-wood frames read more like furniture and hold up better long-term.
Who a daybed suits
- Kids and shared rooms: a daybed-with-trundle turns one footprint into two beds for sleepovers — pair it with our kids’ beds picks.
- Guest rooms: sofa by day, real twin bed by night, with a trundle in reserve for a second guest.
- Home offices: a low, neutral daybed doubles as a reading bench or nap spot without shouting “bed.”
- Small living spaces: a single flexible piece instead of both a couch and a spare bed.
With vs. without a trundle
The trundle question comes down to how often you need to sleep two people.
| Option | Sleeps | Best for | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| Daybed only | One | Solo guests, offices, reading nooks | No overflow bed when two guests show up |
| Daybed with trundle | Two | Sleepovers, siblings, couples visiting | Costs more, heavier, needs floor clearance to roll out |
If you rarely host more than one person, skip the trundle and save the money and weight. If sleepovers or visiting couples are a regular thing, the trundle is the whole point.
Sizes and clearance
Plan for a standard twin mattress (38 x 75 in) on the main frame, and mind two clearances: vertical room under the frame for the trundle to store, and floor space in front for it to roll out fully. Leave roughly 40 inches of open floor for a deployed trundle. If floor space is scarce, a pop-up trundle or a compact sofa bed may fit your room better.
Materials and safety
Solid wood (like pine) resists wobble and lasts longest but costs more. Metal frames are lighter and often cheaper, though the budget ones can rattle — check for center support and welded, not bolted, joints. For kids, look for rounded edges, a secure trundle latch and a mattress-height limit so the sleeper doesn’t sit above the side rails. Always match the mattress thickness to the manufacturer’s maximum, especially for the trundle, which has limited clearance.
Price expectations
Basic metal daybeds without a trundle start around $150–$250. Metal daybeds with a trundle run roughly $250–$450. Solid-wood daybeds, with or without a trundle, sit higher at $400 and up — but they’re the ones still standing after years of daily use.
What size mattress does a daybed use?
Most daybeds take a standard twin mattress (38 x 75 inches) on the main frame. If it has a trundle, the trundle also uses a twin mattress, but usually a thinner low-profile one to fit under the frame.
Do I need a trundle with my daybed?
Only if you regularly need to sleep two people. A daybed alone is perfect for solo guests, home offices and reading nooks. Add a trundle for sleepovers, siblings sharing a room, or couples who visit — otherwise it’s extra cost and weight.
Can a daybed really be used as a sofa?
Yes. Pushed against a wall with bolster and throw pillows, a daybed works as a sofa or reading bench by day. A back rail or wall to lean pillows against, plus a lower-profile mattress, gives the best couch feel.
Are daybeds good for adults or just kids?
They work for both. Adults use daybeds in guest rooms and home offices, and the trundle handles a second guest. The main limit is size — daybeds are twin-width, so they’re a single-sleeper bed for one adult at a time.
How much floor space does a daybed trundle need?
Leave roughly 40 inches of open floor in front so the trundle can roll or pop out fully. Roll-out trundles stay low to the ground; pop-up trundles rise to match the main mattress height and need the same clearance to deploy.