Guida11 min di lettura

Room Sharing vs. Bed Sharing: Understanding the Complete Picture

What the guidelines actually say, what the research shows, and how to make the right choice for your family

EL

Dr. Emma Lindqvist

2026-03-01 · 2026-03-19

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Introduction: Two Approaches, One Goal

In the conversation about infant sleep, two terms are frequently used interchangeably but mean very different things: room sharing (sleeping in the same room but on separate surfaces) and bed sharing (sleeping on the same surface). Understanding this distinction is essential, because the safety evidence for each is quite different.

The AAP recommends room sharing for at least the first six months, and ideally the first year. On bed sharing, the picture is more nuanced than headlines suggest. This guide breaks down the evidence for both approaches and helps families make informed decisions.

Room Sharing: The Universal Recommendation

Room sharing—where the infant sleeps on a separate surface (crib, bassinet, or sidecar crib) in the parents' bedroom—is recommended by virtually every medical organization worldwide. The evidence supporting this recommendation is strong: room sharing is associated with a 50% reduction in SIDS risk compared to solitary sleeping in a separate room.

The mechanism is believed to be related to parental arousal: a parent sleeping nearby is more likely to notice and respond to changes in the infant's breathing or position. The ambient sounds of the parent's breathing may also help regulate the infant's own respiratory patterns.

Bed Sharing: The Nuanced Reality

Bed sharing is where the evidence becomes more complex. The AAP recommends against it, but with important caveats that are often lost in reporting. The 2022 updated guidelines acknowledge that many parents will bed-share and that providing guidance on safer bed-sharing is preferable to ignoring the practice.

The key insight from the research is that bed-sharing risk is not uniform. It varies dramatically based on specific factors:

  • Highest risk: Bed sharing on a sofa or armchair (67x increased risk), bed sharing with a smoker, bed sharing after alcohol consumption, bed sharing with a premature infant
  • Moderate risk: Bed sharing on a soft mattress, bed sharing with non-breastfeeding parent, bed sharing with heavy bedding
  • Lowest risk: Bed sharing by a breastfeeding, non-smoking, sober mother on a firm mattress with a healthy, full-term infant over 4 months old

Professor Peter Blair's research has shown that in the lowest-risk category, the SIDS risk is not statistically distinguishable from room sharing without bed sharing.

The Age Factor: When Risk Changes

Age is one of the most significant variables in bed-sharing safety. The risk profile changes substantially at several milestones:

0–3 months: This is the period of highest vulnerability. Even in low-risk scenarios, bed sharing carries some elevated risk during this period. Room sharing with a separate surface is the safest approach.

4–11 months: Risk decreases significantly after 4 months, particularly for breastfed infants of non-smoking parents. This is the period where the UNICEF and UK guidelines diverge most from the AAP, with many international guidelines considering low-risk bed sharing acceptable.

12+ months: After the first birthday, the SIDS risk period has largely passed, and the primary concerns shift to fall prevention and adequate space. This is where oversized family beds become particularly relevant—providing the space needed for safe, comfortable family sleep.

Kasper Bladt-Laursen, Founder & CEO of FAMBED:

"We see many families who start with a sidecar crib for the first few months and then transition to bed sharing as the child grows. The FAMBED system supports both approaches—our modular design means you can start with a 200 cm configuration and expand to 280 cm or wider as your family's needs change. The key is having a system that grows with your family rather than forcing you into a single arrangement."

Making the Right Choice for Your Family

The evidence supports a flexible, age-appropriate approach:

  1. First 4 months: Room share with a separate sleep surface (bassinet, sidecar crib). This provides proximity benefits with the lowest risk profile.
  2. 4–12 months: If you meet the Safe Sleep Seven criteria, bed sharing becomes a reasonable option. Ensure a firm, gap-free surface with adequate width.
  3. 12+ months: Family bed sharing is widely considered safe. Focus on adequate space, fall prevention, and sleep quality for all family members.

Whatever approach you choose, the sleep surface matters. A firm, spacious, purpose-designed family bed addresses the primary risk factors identified in the research and provides the foundation for safe family sleep at every stage.

Riferimenti e Fonti

  1. [1]AAP Task Force on SIDS (2022). Updated 2022 Recommendations for Reducing Infant Deaths in the Sleep Environment. Pediatrics.
  2. [2]Blair, P.S. et al. (2014). Bed-Sharing in the Absence of Hazardous Circumstances. JAMA Pediatrics.
  3. [3]Carpenter, R. et al. (2013). Bed sharing when parents do not smoke. BMJ Open.
  4. [4]UNICEF UK Baby Friendly Initiative (2023). Co-sleeping and SIDS. UNICEF.

Divulgazione

Family Beds Guide è una pubblicazione indipendente. Alcuni link possono essere link di affiliazione.

EL

Dr. Emma Lindqvist

Redattore di scienze del sonno — Ph.D. Developmental Psychology, Uppsala University

La dottoressa Emma Lindqvist è una ricercatrice nel campo della scienza del sonno e giornalista genitoriale con sede a Stoccolma. Con oltre un decennio di ricerca sui modelli di sonno infantile e sul benessere familiare presso l'Università di Uppsala, apporta una prospettiva tipicamente scandinava al dibattito globale sul modo in cui dormono le famiglie. Il suo lavoro è stato presentato su The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, Pediatrics e Journal of Sleep Research.

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