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Two things can be true at once: Sleeper sofas are a feat of engineering, and they can be the bane of your existence. It’s a marvel to fit a bulky piece of furniture inside another, equally bulky piece of furniture; also, you’ve probably encountered a sleeper sofa that fell short as both a sofa and a bed, hard as rocks to sit on and creaky to sleep on. It’s similarly tricky to find a sleeper sofa that looks nice — i.e., isn’t bulky, awkwardly proportioned, and upholstered in a drab shade of crunchy polyester fabric. (As interior designer Keita Turner put it, “The sign of a quality sleeper is that you walk into the room and don’t know it is one.”)
Luckily, the past several years have seen a vast expansion of sleeper sofas that manage to square the circle: nice-looking enough to live in your living room, well engineered enough that you don’t dread setting them up or sleeping on them. To find them, I consulted experts and interior designers, called on my intrepid Strategist colleagues to test some of the top picks in their own homes, and tested out several top picks myself.
Updated on July 25, 2025
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Our top picks
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What we’re looking for
Size
Sleeper sofas come in a range of sizes, from loveseats or chairs-and-a-half that convert into twin-sized beds and full-sized sofas that contain queen- or king-sized mattresses. Like buying a sofa, your best bet is to measure your space and work back from there.
Conversion mechanism
Sleeper sofas are very much not a solved product, and you’ll find a variety of mechanisms for converting a roughly three-by-seven-foot sofa into a five-by-six-foot bed frame. None is perfect, but all the methods on this list work well enough that I recommend them. Most people associate sleeper sofas with a tri-folded mattress on a metal pullout frame, a style pioneered by the bedding company Leggett & Platt in the 1970s and credited by furniture-maker Scott Jordan as the reason most people hate sleeper sofas. This list also contains trundle beds and convertible daybeds, which stow a second bed frame under the first, and a style I’m calling “foam-on-the-floor” sleeper sofas, which contain panels of foam that can be rearranged into a frameless mattress that lies directly on the ground.
Mattress
A sofa bed’s conversion mechanism determines what kind of mattress it can contain. Metal pull-out mattresses are typically thinner, between 3.5 and 5 inches, since they have to be folded three times to fit in the sofa’s frame. These can contain springs, memory foam, or a mix of the two. A foam-on-the-floor sleeper like the Teddy sofa has a comparatively thicker mattress, around seven to eight inches, because the panels only need to stack once. (For comparison, our best-in-class foam mattress is ten inches thick, so they’re fairly close to the real thing.) In general, a thicker mattress will feel more comfortable — especially for a metal-framed pull-out sofa bed, any extra inch of padding makes a difference in whether or not you can feel a metal bar underneath your back — but the quality of the foam inside matters as well.
Best sleeper sofa overall
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Size: Queen | Conversion mechanism: Metal pullout frame | Mattress: 4” thick memory foam
This two-seater sofa bed from Article, also the maker of one of our favorite sofas, is a good example of Turner’s criteria of a pullout couch that doesn’t look like a pullout couch. It’s “a real Big Comfy Couch,” says former Strategist editor Chelsea Peng, with its padded arms and marshmallowlike silhouette.
After testing the Article Vati sofa myself — the brand doesn’t have a showroom, so they shipped a model to our office — I can confirm it’s a solid, affordable, fits-anyone sleeper sofa. I found the memory-foam mattress is quite supportive and comfortable, something that Strategist outdoors writer Jeremy Rellosa confirmed after taking a ten-minute lunch-break nap on it. It now lives at my parents’ house in New Jersey, and I slept well on it over the holidays: no creaking, and I couldn’t feel the metal frame through the memory-foam mattress. The conversion mechanism is easy to manage with one person — I set it up in less than a minute, cushion removal included. In its sofa form, you’d never guess that there’s a bed inside. Its hyperbolically puffy silhouette has an almost overinflated feel when it first arrived but does break in with use. It comes in 11 colors, from a dusty reddish clay performance fabric to navy-blue velvet.
Best less-expensive sleeper sofa
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Size: Queen | Conversion mechanism: Metal pullout frame | Mattress: 4.75” thick foam
For a less-expensive sleeper sofa, Ikea is a great option. Strategist deals editor Sam Daly slept on her mom’s (now discontinued) Harlanda Ikea sectional “for a few months mid-pandemic and I loved it,” she says. For this article, Strategist beauty writer Tembe Denton-Hurst tested the similar Hyltarp model with similarly glowing reviews. It’s “comfy as both a sleeper and sitting couch,” and a friend who slept on it said it felt like a real bed. (Denton-Hurst added a mattress topper for extra padding.) She also reports that it’s easy to convert with one person. It comes in ten colors, including two shades of blue and neutrals like stone and mushroom brown.
Best frameless sleeper sofa
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Size: King | Conversion mechanism: Foam-on-the-floor | Mattress: 6.69” thick foam
The Teddy sofa by Danish brand Omhu is the best example I’ve seen of the foam-on-the-floor mattress, both in terms of aesthetics and functionality. Two panels of foam are contained by a chrome-plated bracket when configured as a sofa, then convert into a roughly king-size mattress. Strategist senior editor Winnie Yang owns the sofa, so I visited her apartment to test it out. I found it incredibly easy to take apart and put back together, even with one person, and irresistible to sprawl out on in bed form. It’s a great sofa for households with kids and pets — it’s low to the ground and frameless, which means no hard components or sharp edges, and the cushions can be removed and machine-washed. It comes in every color imaginable (21 total, including some beautiful pinks and yellows) and is upholstered in a sturdy, soft polyester corduroy.
Best frameless foldout sleeper sofa
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Size: Twin, queen | Conversion mechanism: Folds out to foam-on-the-floor | Mattress: 6.69” thick foam
Sabai makes an interesting style of sleeper sofa I haven’t seen elsewhere. The seat comprises two slabs of foam stacked on top of one another, which fold out into a foam-on-the-floor mattress. It’s a clever idea — it’s very easy to set up and avoids the problems (and expense) that come with a metal fold-up frame. (There is a small difference in loft between the two halves of the mattress, which I didn’t really mind but could be mitigated with a topper.) Both the queen-size sofa bed and twin-size armchair bed are quite deep and large to accommodate half of a mattress, and you’ll sit on a pillowy and not very supportive upper layer of fill. If you love lounge-y furniture or live in a household of mostly tall people, this could be a great fit. Sabai also has some of my favorite upholstery options — I love the contrast piping and its striped hemp-cotton blend.
Best pullout sleeper sofa for a thick mattress
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Size: Twin, queen | Conversion mechanism: Metal pullout frame | Mattress: 5.5” innerspring
Interior designer Jennifer Wallenstein recommends this slip-covered sofa bed from Crate & Barrel, a brand I trust for comfortable, durable sofas. Among the metal-framed pull-out sofa beds on this list, it has the thickest mattress at five and a half inches, so it’s a great choice if maximal padding is your goal. It’s also highly customizable — it comes in 22 fabrics, is available as 84-inch sofa and a twin-size love seat, and can be configured as part of a sectional.
Best daybed with trundle sleeper sofa
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Size: Twin to king | Conversion mechanism: Trundle pullout | Mattress: Foam cushions
Two of our experts — Ted Roberts, the style and design chief for Schlage, and Turner — recommend Pottery Barn’s Luna sleeper, a daybed that converts into a roughly king-sized mattress, for its “exceptional structural integrity.” Roberts likes that the daybed is available in several styles of performance fabric, which protects it from heavy use or occasional stains. You can sleep on it as is (in daybed form, it’s about the size of a twin mattress) or pull out the seat to unfold a wider sleeping area. It also scores high for aesthetics. “It’s very slick. I almost can’t believe that it’s Pottery Barn,” says Turner.
Best (less expensive) daybed with trundle sleeper sofa
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Size: Twin to king | Conversion mechanism: Trundle pullout | Mattress: Two foam mattresses
For something even more affordable, consider Ikea’s inexpensive daybeds, recommended by Yaiza Armbruster, founder of Atelier Armbruster. She bought the Brimnes model for her kids’ room as seating that doubles as a bed for sleepovers, but it could work well for adults, too —especially in apartments that are short on space, since it contains two large drawers. (It would be a great place to store linens.) The seat is made up of two twin foam mattresses set on top of each other, and a trundle converts the daybed into a roughly king-sized frame — just rearrange the twin mattresses side-by-side. As far as looks, it’s recognizably Ikea; you can customize it with a coat of paint or new hardware.
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Best four-in-one sleeper sofa
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Size: Twin to king | Conversion mechanism: Foam-on-the-floor | Mattress: Foam cushions
Armbruster likes the Twilight sleeper because “it looks nice, is comfortable, and opens up to what’s essentially a king-size bed.” It’s made of two parts — a cylindrical backrest bolster that can be adjusted to customize seat depth and a large seat cushion made out of foam that turns into the mattress. Simply pivot the bolster up and back, then remove the cushion and place on the floor. When pushed up against the sofa’s base, the cushion creates a bed that’s larger than a queen but slightly smaller than a king. Or you can simply keep the two parts separate to create two twin sleeping beds. The sofa can even be used as a daybed, giving you four functions — sofa, daybed, queen bed, and two twins — in one.
Best stylish sleeper sofa
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Size: Queen | Conversion mechanism: Metal pullout frame | Mattress: 3.5” thick cotton-quilted foam
Sixpenny makes some of our favorite slipcovered sofas, so I was curious to hear Strategist senior editor Simone Kitchens’s thoughts when she tested out their sleeper. Her review: She’s a big fan of their Devyn model as a couch, and it also makes a great bed. The mattress is on the thinner side at 3.5 inches, but it’s quite firm and supportive: “I like a very firm mattress and there’s no sinking into this one,” she says. I recommend Sixpenny if you’re a textile nerd — their sofas are upholstered in beautiful, minimally treated fabrics — and the Devyn sofa is no exception. “The fabric is beautiful, hefty, and great quality,” Kitchens says. (And it’s not hard to clean: “My kid got some yogurt on it, and it was easy to dab away.”)
Best splurge sleeper sofa for aesthetics
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Size: Queen | Conversion mechanism: Wood pullout frame | Mattress: 4” thick, polyurethane foam
Strategist contributor Fanny Singer set out to find a “non-hideous sleeper sofa” for her office and ended up buying this daybed from Belgian company Bautier. Made of solid oak, it has a simple conversion mechanism that allows the slatted base to expand into a queen-size bed frame. Like the Ikea Brimnes, the daybed cushion can be unfolded into a mattress. (The mattress is on the thinner side, so Singer adds this latex topper for added cushioning.) It’s a splurge, but it’s my favorite option on this list as a piece of furniture — it has all the hallmarks of something that will last for decades.
[Editor’s note: This price is an estimated conversion of euros to dollars when the article was last updated. Bautier ships internationally from its home base in Belgium — for the added costs of shipping, taxes, and any other fees, you can get details and request a delivery quote on their site.]
Best splurge sleeper sofa for comfort and engineering
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Size: Cot to king | Conversion mechanism: Metal pullout frame | Mattress: 4-5” thick, multiple options
If you ask a furniture seller about the best sleeper sofa, they’ll probably point you toward American Leather. (The name is misleading: They do make a great leather sofa, but not all their sofas are leather.) The Texas company has their own patented conversion mechanism, which is smoother to unfold than the standard metal frame (I could even manage it one-handed) and eliminates the metal bars you may feel under your back in a badly-constructed sleeper.
I’ve tested versions of this sofa twice: at the showroom of Scott Jordan Furniture in the Brooklyn Navy Yard and at Room & Board in Manhattan. (Room & Board’s Berin sleeper sofa is manufactured for the retailer exclusively by American Leather.) Although it’s a splurge, I found it to be the best-engineered of the bunch. It’s comfortable to sprawl out on and easy to convert. Sleeper-sofa cushions can be hard as rocks, but the Berin has the comfiest cushions I’ve tried on a sleeper sofa — they’re soft, supportive, and bouncy. The sofas are made to order so have a ton of customization options, from size (cot to queen to king) to the style of mattress and the upholstery.
Some more Strategist-approved sofas and accessories
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Our experts
• Yaiza Armbruster, founder of Atelier Armbruster
• Mandy Cheng, interior designer
• Kelly R. Collier-Clark, principal designer at Plot Twist Design
• Sam Daly, Strategist deals editor
• Tembe Denton-Hurst, Strategist beauty writer
• Scott Jordan, founder of Scott Jordan Furniture
• Simone Kitchens, Strategist senior editor
• Annie Mueller, interior designer
• Chelsea Peng, former Strategist senior editor
• Ted Roberts, style and design chief for Schlage
• Devin Shaffer, Decorilla design expert
• Keita Turner, interior designer
• Jennifer Wallenstein, interior designer
• Winnie Yang, Strategist senior editor
Additional reporting by Lauren Ro
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