My guy has had a pillow topped queen for several years.
If my dd had her wish she'd get a memory foam topped queen and convert our family room into her bedroom suite, but none of that will ever be happening

My guy has had a pillow topped queen for several years.
This is what I wished my daughter had had when she was a teenage instead of a day bed. It would have be perfect for her and her friends.My daughter who is almost 12, has the bunk bed, double on bottom, single on top. I love it, absolutely love it. We don't have extra bed rooms, so at times when my friends stayed over I just stuck her on top, and they took the bottom.
It is a great spacesaver!
My dd 13 wants to re-do her room this spring because its "too little girl" for her nowShe has a very small room and hang-out space is limited. I was thinking of getting her a loft bed with either an open space under it so she can put her dresser there to make more floor space, or her small desk and buy a bunch of floor cushions too stick under there.
Then I found a bunk bed with a futon on the bottom and thought that might work since its a place that she can sit when she has friends over. The problem is she is 13 and this is the last time I plan on buying furniture for her room so I want to make sure that in 1 year, or in 6 years, she'll still be okay with it.
Does anyone here have a teen that still sleeps on a loft or bunk bed? Are they okay with it, or do they absolutely hate it?
Right now she has a metal frame daybed that I had gotten a whole bunch of throw pillows to make it more like a couch to hang out on, but she hates it because its squeaky.
We have one of these and one set of bunk beds. Both have the "sit up in bed too fast and hit your head on the ceiling" inconvenience along with being challenging to change the bedding. In addition, once the kids became adult-sized, they said the top bunks were not comfortable because the mattress isn't the same thickness as the bottom mattress. I had no idea this was the case when we bought them.DS16 has a loft/bunk combo bed. The top is a loft bed supported on one side by a desk and the other by a bookshelf and dresser drawers. There is a bed that fits perpendicular to the top bed between the desk/dresser. He sleeps on the lower bed. He also has a very small room. It has been nice when he has had friends sleep over but he never hangs out in his room. We asked if he would like us to take out the lower bed and put a chair or something in there but he doesn't want to sleep on the upper bed (too much of a hassle getting in and out and making the bed).
We have one of these and one set of bunk beds. Both have the "sit up in bed too fast and hit your head on the ceiling" inconvenience along with being challenging to change the bedding. In addition, once the kids became adult-sized, they said the top bunks were not comfortable because the mattress isn't the same thickness as the bottom mattress. I had no idea this was the case when we bought them.
We bought my daughter a loft bed when she was about thirteen. She is turning 20 this month and lives at college. She loves that crazy bed but finally asked for a new bed frame. Her loft actually converts to a regular bed but she has her heart set on another particular bed. I’m actually going to put her bed and a book shelf on Facebook market place soon. I will say the bed has been a great quality bed through the years.My dd 13 wants to re-do her room this spring because its "too little girl" for her nowShe has a very small room and hang-out space is limited. I was thinking of getting her a loft bed with either an open space under it so she can put her dresser there to make more floor space, or her small desk and buy a bunch of floor cushions too stick under there.
Then I found a bunk bed with a futon on the bottom and thought that might work since its a place that she can sit when she has friends over. The problem is she is 13 and this is the last time I plan on buying furniture for her room so I want to make sure that in 1 year, or in 6 years, she'll still be okay with it.
Does anyone here have a teen that still sleeps on a loft or bunk bed? Are they okay with it, or do they absolutely hate it?
Right now she has a metal frame daybed that I had gotten a whole bunch of throw pillows to make it more like a couch to hang out on, but she hates it because its squeaky.
LOL. Well DD was sleeping in a loft bed in 2011 so I'm just late to post!Zombie thread, but ds21 begged for a loft bed when he was 14. I finally caved, by the time he went to college he was 6’1” and 200 pounds and happy to be done with it. Ds17 moved into his room and after a month begged to get rid of it. Dd16 and dd18 had bunk beds for years, when dd18 took over dd23’s room, dd16 begged to get rid of them. Dd18 is in a tiny forced triple at college. Even though her desk blocks access to the area under her bed where she stores a lot of stuff (no room for dressers), she refuses to loft her bed.