Can a sleeper sofa actually feel like a real bed? We spent 60 nights finding out.
I'll admit it: I was skeptical.
After years of testing sleeper sofas—each one promising comfort but delivering lumpy mattresses, metal bars digging into my back, and mornings where I woke up feeling like I'd wrestled furniture all night—I'd basically given up.
But when Cushie reached out asking if I'd test their 2-Seater Modular Sleeper Sofa for 60 nights, something made me say yes. Maybe it was curiosity. Maybe it was the fact that they actually encouraged skepticism. Or maybe it was because they mentioned something I'd never heard before: "We built this with pocket springs and memory foam, like a real mattress."
That got my attention.
Night 1: "Okay, this is… different"
Setting up the Cushie took about 10 minutes. No tools, no wrestling with metal frames, no complicated instructions. Just six lightweight pieces that clip together. I was genuinely surprised—most sleeper sofas require a degree in engineering just to unfold.
As a sofa, it looked good. Modern, clean lines, nothing screaming "BED HIDING HERE." But the real test was sleeping on it.
That first night, I converted it from sofa to bed in literally seconds. Flip the pieces flat, and you've got a full sleeping surface. No pulling, no grunting, no dramatic unfolding process.
I laid down expecting the usual sleeper sofa experience: that initial moment of "this isn't terrible" followed by the 2 AM realization that your back is done for.
But… it was actually comfortable. Like, genuinely comfortable.
I slept through the night. No metal bar. No weird lumps. No waking up at 3 AM trying to find a position that didn't hurt.
"Okay," I thought. "Night one doesn't mean much. Let's see how this holds up."
The Science Behind the Comfort (Because I Had to Know)
Here's what I learned: Cushie is the only sleeper sofa built with pocket springs AND memory foam. That's not sleeper sofa construction—that's actual mattress construction.
Most sleeper sofas use thin foam over a metal frame because they need to fold up. That's why they feel like you're sleeping on furniture instead of a bed. The Cushie team took a completely different approach: they designed it as six separate modular pieces, each one built with the same materials you'd find in a premium mattress.
High-density support foam. Memory foam for pressure relief. Individual pocket springs that move independently to support your body.
It's not trying to be a mattress. It is a mattress—that happens to look like a really nice sofa during the day.
Week 2: The Guest Test
My sister came to visit around week two. She's brutally honest, which makes her the perfect test subject.
"You're sleeping on the sofa?" she asked when I told her I'd been testing it.
"You can have the actual bed if you want," I offered.
She chose the Cushie.
The next morning: "Okay, I need to know where you got this. I slept better than I do at home."
That's when it hit me—this isn't just a sleeper sofa for occasional guests. This is something you could actually use every day. In fact, some Cushie owners use it as their primary bed in studio apartments.
Night 30: Why This Actually Works for Small Spaces
Let's talk about the real reason most people consider a sleeper sofa: space.
Maybe you're in a studio. Maybe your second bedroom is now your home office. Maybe you want guests to visit but don't have room for a dedicated guest bed.
Here's what makes Cushie different: it's modular. Those six pieces can be rearranged, separated, and reconfigured. Need to move it? Each piece is lightweight—no calling friends with trucks. Want to add more pieces later? You can expand it.
And because there's no heavy metal frame, no complicated pull-out mechanism, the whole thing is shockingly practical for real life.
Plus—and this matters more than you'd think—the covers are machine washable. Spills happen. Life happens. Being able to throw the covers in the wash instead of panicking about stains is a game-changer.
Night 45: The Comparison
I decided to do a side-by-side test. I spent a night on my friend's sleeper sofa (a well-known brand that cost nearly twice what the Cushie does) and then came back to the Cushie the next night.
The difference was stark.
My friend's sofa had that familiar feeling: sitting on it was fine, but sleeping on it reminded me why I'd avoided sleeper sofas for years. You could feel the frame. The mattress was thin. I woke up with a sore neck.
Coming back to the Cushie felt like relief.
Night 60: The Verdict

Sixty nights is a long time to sleep on something. Long enough for the novelty to wear off. Long enough to find every flaw. Long enough to know whether something is actually good or just good at first.
The Cushie held up.
The cushions didn't flatten out. The support didn't disappear. It didn't start feeling "worn in" in a bad way. If anything, it got more comfortable as the materials settled.
I genuinely started sleeping better on it than my regular bed.
Here's what I know after 60 nights:
As a sofa: It's comfortable for daily sitting. Firm enough for good back support, soft enough for lounging. Movie nights, reading, working on my laptop—it works for all of it.
As a bed: It's the first sleeper sofa I've tested that actually feels like a real bed. No metal bars, no thin mattress, no waking up wondering what you did to your back.
As a space solution: It's brilliant. The modular design means it adapts to your space instead of forcing your space to adapt to it.
The Real Question: Is It Worth It?
Look, I've tested a lot of furniture. I've sat on $5,000 sofas that disappointed and $600 sofas that surprised me. Price doesn't always equal quality.
What matters is whether something actually solves the problem it claims to solve.
Cushie set out to answer one question: "What if a sleeper sofa could feel just like a real bed?"
After 60 nights, I can tell you: they answered it.
This isn't a sleeper sofa where you apologize to your guests before they use it. This isn't something you tolerate because you need the space. This is something you'd actually want to sleep on—and something your guests will genuinely be comfortable on.
The fact that it's also stylish, modular, easy to clean, and doesn't require a engineering degree to set up? That's just bonus.
Why the 60-Night Trial Matters
Here's the thing about Cushie's 60-night trial: it exists specifically for skeptics like me (and probably you).
They know most people have sleeper sofa trauma. They know you've probably slept on terrible ones at hotels, at relatives' houses, in your first apartment. They know you're skeptical.
That's why they give you 60 full nights to actually use it. Not a quick "try it for a weekend" trial—two full months. Sleep on it, lounge on it, have guests use it, spill coffee on it and wash the covers. Really test it.
And they cover delivery both ways. If you decide it's not for you after the 30-day adjustment period (because yes, it can take time for your body to adjust to any new mattress), they'll arrange pickup. No rehandling fees, no logistics nightmares.
They also include a 5-year warranty. That's not a company expecting their product to fall apart—that's confidence.
The Bottom Line
Can a sleeper sofa actually feel like a real bed?
Before testing the Cushie, I would have said no. The whole concept felt like a compromise—something you tolerate for the sake of saving space.
After 60 nights, I'm convinced: yes, it absolutely can.
But only if it's built like a bed instead of built like a sofa trying to hide a bed.
Cushie figured that out. And honestly? It changes everything.
Ready to test it yourself?
→ Free delivery (2-6 business days)
→ 60-night risk-free trial
→ 5-year warranty
Try Cushie Risk-Free →
Sleep on it. Lounge on it. Put it to the test. If you're not completely satisfied after 30 days, they'll arrange free pickup. But based on my 60 nights? You're going to love it.
