The best modern trundle bed does two jobs at once: it looks like a deliberate, clean-lined piece of furniture by day, then rolls out a second sleeping surface in seconds when guests arrive. In 2026 the trundle category has finally shed its clunky, kid-only image — the picks below lean on blackened steel, solid wood and muted upholstery so they earn a place in a home office, studio apartment or grown-up guest room, not just a bunk-filled kids’ room.
We handled roll-out and pop-up mechanisms across metal and wood frames, paying attention to how smoothly the second bed deploys, whether the edge is sturdy enough to sit on, and how modern the frame actually reads in a photo. Here are the modern trundle beds worth buying this year.
The Best Modern Trundle Beds at a Glance
Zinus Suzanne Metal & Wood Platform Bed with Trundle
- Genuinely modern steel-and-wood look, not juvenile
- Trundle glides on smooth caster wheels
- No box spring needed on either level
- Trundle sits low to the floor (no pop-up)
- Assembly takes about 45 minutes
DHP Manila Metal Daybed with Trundle
- Very affordable for a full daybed-plus-trundle
- Slim modern metal profile
- Fast, tool-light assembly
- Trundle is a low roll-out, not pop-up
- Metal slats can be noisy without a mattress pad
Walker Edison Modern Wood Daybed with Trundle
- Solid wood, adult-appropriate finish
- Doubles convincingly as a sofa
- Sturdy edge you can actually sit on
- Heavier and slower to assemble
- Costs more than metal alternatives
Novogratz Marion Daybed and Trundle
- On-trend colorways beyond black and white
- Trundle wheels lock in place
- Compact footprint for smaller rooms
- Best with a low-profile mattress on top
- Trundle mattress not included
Max & Lily Solid Wood Daybed with Pop-Up Trundle
- Pop-up trundle levels to the main bed
- Heavy-duty solid pine construction
- Creates a near-king combined surface
- Pop-up lift is heavier to raise
- Priciest option here
Yaheetech Metal Daybed with Roll-Out Trundle
- Slimmest footprint of the group
- Understated modern grid headboard
- Inexpensive and light to move
- Thinner tubing than premium picks
- Trundle glides better on hard floors than carpet
How to choose a modern trundle bed
A trundle is a low secondary bed on casters that stores underneath a main bed or daybed. “Modern” narrows the field to frames with clean geometry, restrained finishes and no fussy scrollwork. Once you’ve committed to the look, four decisions do most of the work.
Roll-out vs. pop-up trundle
This is the single biggest choice. A roll-out trundle simply slides out and sits a few inches off the floor — simplest, cheapest and lightest, and fine for kids or occasional guests who don’t mind sleeping low. A pop-up trundle uses a scissor-lift frame that raises the second mattress to the same height as the main bed, so you can push the two together into a near-king surface. Pop-ups cost more, weigh more and take a firmer arm to raise, but they’re the right call for adult sleepovers. Our main trundle bed guide breaks the two mechanisms down in more depth.
Metal vs. wood frame
Metal frames are lighter, cheaper and ship flatter — great for rentals and rooms you rearrange often. Solid wood frames feel more substantial when you sit on the edge and photograph as more “finished,” which matters if the bed doubles as a sofa in a visible room. Wood also tends to be quieter; metal slats can rattle without a mattress pad between the slats and mattress.
Mattress thickness
Trundle clearance is unforgiving. The stored mattress has to fit under the main bed with the trundle frame, so a low-profile mattress of roughly 6–8 inches is safest. Go too thick and the trundle won’t roll back in. The main bed can take a standard mattress, but if you plan to push a pop-up trundle flush against it, match the two mattress heights so the combined surface is level.
Wheel type and floor
Cheap trundles use hard plastic casters that grab carpet and squeal on hardwood. The smoothest units we rolled used soft, wider casters — and a couple had locking wheels so the trundle doesn’t drift out from under the bed overnight. On thick carpet, expect any trundle to need a firmer pull.
Sizes and dimensions
Nearly all trundle beds are built around the twin size, since two twins is what fits within a standard bed footprint. Here’s what to plan for.
| Component | Typical size | Approx. dimensions | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Main bed | Twin | 38″ × 75″ | Standard twin mattress fits |
| Trundle bed | Twin | 38″ × 75″ | Requires low-profile mattress |
| Pop-up combined | ~King width | ~76″ × 75″ | Two twins pushed together |
| Trundle mattress height | Low-profile | 6–8″ max | Thicker won’t store underneath |
If you’re weighing whether a two-twin setup gives you enough width, our explainer on what size bed two twins make and the full bed sizes and dimensions guide cover the exact measurements.
Comparison table
| Model | Best for | Frame | Trundle type | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zinus Suzanne | Overall pick | Steel + wood | Roll-out | $$ |
| DHP Manila | Budget | Metal | Roll-out | $ |
| Walker Edison Wood Daybed | Design | Solid wood | Roll-out | $$$ |
| Novogratz Marion | Teens | Metal | Roll-out | $$ |
| Max & Lily Pop-Up | Sleepovers | Solid wood | Pop-up | $$$ |
| Yaheetech Daybed | Compact rooms | Metal | Roll-out | $ |
Modern trundle beds vs. other guest solutions
A trundle isn’t the only way to sleep an occasional guest. Compared with a sofa bed, a trundle gives you two real mattresses instead of a folding mechanism, but takes up a bedroom footprint rather than living-room space. Compared with a Murphy bed, it’s far cheaper and needs no wall mounting, but stores only a low-profile mattress. If you want the daytime-sofa look specifically, a daybed with a trundle — which is what most picks here are — is the sweet spot.
Assembly and care
Most metal trundle daybeds assemble in 20–45 minutes with the included Allen key; solid wood pop-ups take longer and are a two-person job. Once built, tighten the trundle’s caster bolts after the first few weeks — they loosen as the frame settles. Vacuum under the main bed periodically, since the trundle cavity collects dust that then transfers to the stored mattress. Rotate the trundle mattress occasionally even if it’s rarely slept on, so it doesn’t develop a permanent compression line from the slats.
Who each style is for — and who should skip it
A metal roll-out daybed like the DHP Manila or Yaheetech is for renters, dorms and rooms where the second bed comes out only a few times a year — cheap, light and easy to move, but skip it if you want a substantial, sit-on-the-edge feel. A solid wood daybed like the Walker Edison suits visible rooms — a home office or studio where the bed doubles as a sofa all day — but it’s heavier and pricier, so pass if budget or portability rules. A pop-up model like the Max & Lily is for households that host two guests at once and want a level, near-king surface; skip it if you only ever deploy one low guest bed, since you’d be paying for a lift you never use. Teens who care about how the room photographs are best served by the on-trend Novogratz Marion colorways rather than plain black metal.
Styling a trundle bed into the room
Because most of these frames read as a daybed by day, they invite styling like a sofa. A row of throw pillows along the back wall turns the mattress into a couch and hides the fact that it’s a bed at all — the trick that makes a trundle work in a living space rather than looking like a spare mattress parked in the corner. A fitted sheet in a clean solid color reads more modern than a busy comforter, and a slim bolster along the open edge finishes the sofa illusion. Keep the trundle’s bedding folded inside or in the frame’s storage so deploying it stays a two-minute job. In a small studio, positioning the daybed under a window and flanking it with a floor lamp completes the lounge feel our daybed guide recommends.
Mistakes to avoid
The most common regret is buying a trundle mattress that’s too thick to store — measure your clearance first. The second is assuming any trundle rolls smoothly on carpet; if your room is carpeted, prioritize soft, wide casters. Third, don’t skip the mattress pad on metal frames unless you enjoy the rattle. Fourth, don’t overlook floor clearance in front of the bed — you need roughly a full mattress length of clear space to roll the trundle out, which a tight room may not have. Finally, if you specifically want a level king-width bed for sleepovers, only a pop-up trundle delivers that — a roll-out will always sit lower than the main bed.
Ready to upgrade your guest room?
Our overall pick pairs a genuinely modern steel-and-wood frame with a smooth-rolling trundle — check current pricing and availability.
Check price on AmazonDo trundle beds need a special mattress?
Not special, but low-profile. The stored trundle mattress should be about 6–8 inches thick so it clears the underside of the main bed when rolled back in. The main bed can use a standard mattress.
Can adults sleep on a trundle bed?
Yes, comfortably, especially on a pop-up model that levels the trundle to the main bed. Choose a solid wood frame with a sturdy edge and a supportive low-profile mattress for adult guests.
What’s the difference between a roll-out and pop-up trundle?
A roll-out slides out and stays low to the floor — simpler and cheaper. A pop-up uses a lift mechanism to raise the second mattress to the same height as the main bed, letting you combine them into a near-king surface.
Will a trundle roll smoothly on carpet?
Only if it has good casters. Hard plastic wheels grab carpet; soft, wider casters roll far better. On thick carpet expect a firmer pull regardless of wheel quality.
How much space do I need for a modern trundle bed?
Plan for a standard twin footprint for the main bed, plus enough clear floor in front to roll the trundle fully out — roughly the length of a second twin mattress, about 75 inches.
Are trundle beds sturdy enough for daily use?
The main bed of a quality trundle daybed is fine for daily sleep. The trundle itself is best treated as an occasional or guest bed, since it sits lower and its mattress is thinner.
Do trundle beds come with both mattresses?
Almost never — frames ship without mattresses. Budget for a standard mattress up top and a low-profile mattress for the trundle.
Can I push a pop-up trundle against the main bed to make one big bed?
Yes. That’s the main appeal of pop-up models: raise the trundle to the main bed’s height and push them together for a combined surface roughly the width of a king.