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A new bed is a long-term decision. Here’s how to choose one that fits your space, your sleep, and your life.
Last Modified 20 April 2026 First Added 20 April 2026
There’s nothing quite like a new bed – it’s where the day ends, the morning starts, and a surprising amount of life happens in between.
Choosing a new bed is one of those decisions that repays every minute you spend on it. Get it right, and it’s the kind of upgrade you feel every single morning. Better support for the hours you’re asleep, more space for the hours you’re not, and a look that finally suits the bedroom you’ve worked hard to put together. Here are 11 things to think about before you decide.
Most people replace a bed reactively, when something has gone noticeably wrong. The more useful question to ask is what you actually want to be different this time. More space? A calmer-looking room? Better support overnight? The answer shapes everything else, and it’s worth sitting with before you start looking.
Most people underestimate the space they need. Not just their height, their actual sleeping footprint. Do you stretch out diagonally? Sleep with one arm flung wide? Tend to migrate to the middle in the night? If the answer to any of those is yes, you probably need a bigger bed than you think. A king size bed gives each person sharing roughly the width of a single. That’s worth knowing before you settle on a double.
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Our 2026 Sleep Survey found that 35% of people say their partner taking up too much space is one of the most frustrating things about sharing a bed, and a quarter admit they actually sleep better when their partner isn’t there at all. If that sounds familiar, the solution probably isn’t a ‘sleep divorce‘. It might just be more space. Pets factor in, too. 31% of Brits share their bed with an animal, and a Labrador takes up a surprising amount of room. Our best bed size for couples guide will help you weigh up your options.
Sleep is only one way a bedroom is used. Do you wind down with a book most nights? Watch TV from the pillow? Work with a laptop balanced on your knees? The way you use the space beyond sleeping shapes what kind of bed actually works for you. A bedroom that doubles as a reading nook, a home office, or a weekend retreat needs a bed that supports all of it, not just the hours you’re asleep.
Yes, the bed needs to fit. But there’s a difference between the largest bed a room can technically contain and the largest it can comfortably hold. The goal is to have enough clear space on at least three sides so the room still feels like a room. Our mattress size guide covers standard UK dimensions, and our home measuring guide takes you through the practical side before you commit.
According to Census 2021 data from the Office for National Statistics, 38.5% of households in England and Wales have just one or two bedrooms. That’s nearly 9.5 million homes where the bedroom is quietly doing the work of several rooms at once. That’s a lot of bedrooms quietly moonlighting as storage units. So, it’s worth asking whether a bed with built-in storage could solve some of that before you start looking at wardrobes or extra furniture. Our storage beds guide covers the options in detail.
If you regularly wake up stiff or achy, it’s helpful to think about whether your current bed is part of the problem before you choose the next one. The base type and mattress combination affect how supported you feel overnight, and getting that right matters more than most people realise at the point of buying. Our back pain and sleep guide is a useful starting point if this is a factor for you.
One thing that’s useful to know before you start: the base and the mattress are not independent decisions. What you put underneath affects how the mattress above performs. If you’re thinking about replacing both, it’s worth making that decision together rather than in two separate trips. Something to factor in before committing to one or the other.
Your bed is the most prominent thing in the room. It sets the tone for everything around it. If your taste runs towards clean lines and calm, uncluttered spaces, a low-profile frame in a neutral fabric or natural wood tends to sit well. If you’re drawn to something more expressive, a tall upholstered headboard in velvet or a bold metal bed makes a real statement.
You should also think about how the frame colour sits with the rest of the room – a warm oak finish reads very differently from a cool grey fabric, and getting that right saves a lot of second-guessing later. Whether your bedroom style is pared-back minimalist, warm and layered, or somewhere in between, our bedroom colour wheel is a good place to start.
Top tip: If you spend a lot of time sitting up in bed reading, a padded headboard is as much a comfort decision as a style one. A flat wall doesn’t offer much after the first chapter.
A bed bought for a single life in a first flat can look quite different to one chosen for a shared bedroom, a family home, or a room that needs to work harder as you get older. Moving in with a partner is one of the most common triggers for sizing up, and often the moment people realise a double was never really enough for two.
Kids arriving tends to bring midnight visitors into the equation, which is its own argument for a bigger bed. And for anyone managing joint pain or mobility changes, bed height and base type start to matter in ways they didn’t before. Our adjustable bed range is helpful if comfort and positioning have become a factor.
Our 2026 Sleep Survey found that Brits have had their bed frame for an average of 9.31 years. That’s nearly a decade of life changes happening around a bed chosen for a completely different version of you. It’s easy to default to “same as before but newer” without stopping to ask whether what you had before was actually right. This is a good moment to do that.
When you’re ready to take the next step, our bed buying guide covers everything from frame types to base options in detail.
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