In UK family homes, the sofa bed often becomes the unofficial second bedroom. Cousins visit for the weekend, an older sibling needs somewhere to crash during exams, or a younger child wants to camp in the living room as a treat. The piece of furniture you choose for that role has to balance comfort, durability and a shape that suits everyday family life. We have spent a lot of time helping parents at Furniture in Fashion think this through, and a few clear themes come up again and again.
Children are usually lighter than adults, so the mattress does not need to be as firm or as thick as one designed for nightly adult use. What matters more is a stable frame, a sleeping surface free of obvious hard ridges and a fabric that wipes down without fuss. A child who spills a drink or wakes up too early should not be a crisis for the upholstery.
Headroom is also worth thinking about. Younger children often roll, sit up suddenly or read in bed. A sofa bed without a tall structure looming over the head end tends to feel safer to them and easier for parents to settle them on.
Soft woven fabrics in mid tones hide the minor marks of family life far better than pale cottons or smooth synthetics. A textured weave breaks up small stains visually, and a darker base colour saves a lot of anxious cleaning. Our fabric sofas include sofa bed shapes in colours that suit busy households.
If a child sleeps on the sofa bed regularly, a removable, washable cover is worth its weight. It removes the worry that comes with the occasional accident and keeps the piece looking fresh for longer.
Most family living rooms are not large enough to give over an entire wall to a guest bed. A two or three seater shape that opens out into a comfortable single or small double works well. It still seats the family for a film night and turns into a sleeping spot when needed. Take a look at our 3 seater fabric sofas to see how the proportions sit in real rooms.
If the living room runs along the back of an extension, a corner shape may suit the space better. Children often enjoy the snug feeling of sleeping in the corner of a sectional, with the back and side acting like a soft cocoon.
Click clack frames, pull out metal actions and lift up bases all behave differently. None of them are designed for a small child to set up unsupervised. Choose a model where an adult can open and close the bed in a few seconds without trapping fingers, and explain clearly that it is not a toy. Models with a smooth single motion tend to be the most family friendly.
A child sleeps better when the sofa stops looking like a sofa at bedtime. A fitted sheet over the open mattress, a proper duvet rather than a throw, and a familiar pillow from their own bed make a real difference. Keep the set in a blanket box near the sofa so the routine stays simple. Browse our storage furniture for pieces that suit family living rooms.
A small lamp on a side table near the sofa bed gives a child a gentler bedtime than the main ceiling light. It also helps parents check on them during the night without lighting the whole room. A simple table lamp from our table lamps range is usually enough.
If the sofa bed lives in the main living room, it will see crisps, drink bottles and the occasional rough and tumble. A removable cover, washable scatter cushions and a rug under the front edge of the sofa all reduce wear. The sofa stays presentable, and the family does not feel they have to police every snack.
Yes, provided the mattress sits flat without obvious gaps or hard bars and the frame is stable. Younger children should sleep nearer the back of the sofa bed and an adult should set up the mechanism.
Occasional use over weekends and holidays is fine for most models. If it becomes a long term arrangement, look at sofa beds described as suitable for daily use, with a deeper mattress.
Leather wipes clean easily and resists spills, which suits busy family rooms. Some children find leather cooler in winter, so a soft throw on top can help.
A two seater sofa bed opening to a small double is usually a sensible balance, keeping daytime seating realistic while giving a child a proper sleeping surface.
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