Should you make your bed every morning? Here’s the real productivity debate—plus when it helps, when it doesn’t, and what to do instead.
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Get it on Play StoreI’ve had this argument with myself more times than I want to admit. Some mornings I make the bed like I’m trying to win an invisible gold medal. Other mornings I leave it looking like a raccoon paid rent there.
And honestly? Both can be fine.
The whole “make your bed” debate gets treated like it’s a personality test. If you do it, you’re disciplined. If you don’t, you’re chaotic. That’s nonsense. A made bed is not proof of productivity—it’s just one tiny habit that may or may not help your brain get moving.
Still, there’s a reason this topic won’t die. For some people, making the bed is a legit anchor habit. For others, it’s just one more task stealing 45 seconds of sleep from them.
So yeah, let’s talk about what actually matters.
The big argument for bed-making is simple: it creates a quick win.
You wake up, do one small thing, and instantly feel a little more in control. That matters more than people think. Momentum is weirdly powerful. One completed task often makes the next one easier—brush teeth, drink water, open laptop, stop doomscrolling.
I’ve noticed this in my own life. On days I make the bed, my room feels less like a mess and more like a place I’m choosing to live in. It sounds dramatic, but tiny environmental shifts absolutely change your mood.
And there’s another thing: you’re less likely to crawl back into bed. If your bed is smooth and tucked in, it’s not as tempting to flop down for “just five minutes” and accidentally lose 40 minutes to a podcast and a phone rabbit hole.
So if you’re someone who struggles to get moving in the morning, making the bed can be a cheap, easy little signal to your brain: the day has started.
But here’s my strong opinion: making your bed is not sacred.
If it stresses you out, feels pointless, or keeps you from doing more useful things, skip it. Productivity is not about performing tiny rituals for the sake of looking organized. It’s about moving your life forward in ways that matter.
And some mornings, making the bed is just bad math.
If you’re short on sleep, running late, wrangling kids, or mentally cooked before 8 a.m., spending 2 minutes smoothing blankets may not be the best use of your energy. You probably need water, breakfast, a shower, or silence. Not hospital corners.
I also think this habit gets overhyped because it’s visible. People can see a made bed. They can’t see whether you answered the scary email, finished your assignment, or didn’t spiral for 30 minutes. Visible habits are not always valuable habits.
Here’s the honest answer: making your bed can help productivity, but only indirectly.
It doesn’t magically make you disciplined. It doesn’t turn you into a morning person. And it definitely won’t fix procrastination if your real issue is burnout, poor sleep, or trying to do too much.
What it can do is:
That’s it. And that’s still useful.
I’d call it a supporting habit, not a main character habit. It can help your day start well, but it shouldn’t become the thing you obsess over while ignoring the stuff that actually matters.
Make the bed if it helps you.
That sounds annoyingly simple, but it’s the truth. Here are a few situations where I think it’s a genuinely smart move:
And if you want to build the habit, keep it stupidly easy. Don’t make it a 10-minute ordeal with decorative pillows and symmetry and whatever else people on TikTok are doing.
Just straighten the sheets. Pull the blanket up. Done.
But if you’re exhausted, don’t force it.
Seriously. Some people turn bed-making into a weird moral issue. “I can’t start my day unless I make the bed.” Cool, if that works for you. But if it turns into another rigid rule you have to obey, it can become annoying fast.
Skip it if:
And if you’re in survival mode, focus on the basics first. Sleep, food, hydration, movement, and one meaningful task beat a perfectly made bed every single time.
The better question is: Does making my bed help me live better?
That’s the real debate.
For some people, yes. It’s grounding. It reduces chaos. It starts the day with a win.
For others, no. It’s busywork dressed up as discipline. And there’s no prize for doing chores that don’t matter to you.
I think the healthiest approach is to treat it like an experiment. Try it for 14 days. Notice what changes. Do you feel calmer? More in control? Less likely to lounge around? Or do you feel mildly annoyed and secretly resentful?
That answer tells you more than any productivity guru ever will.
If you want a real answer for your own life, run a small experiment.
Here’s a simple 7-day test:
Then do the opposite for 7 days.
Don’t just ask “Did I make my bed?” Ask:
That’s the kind of data your life deserves.
And if you like tracking habits in a super simple way, Trider (myhabits.in) is a pretty nice place to test stuff like this without making it a whole production.
Here’s where bed-making becomes actually useful: pair it with a real morning anchor.
Instead of treating it like the main event, attach it to a habit that matters more.
For example:
That last one? Weirdly effective.
The idea is to use bed-making as a trigger, not a trophy. One small action that nudges you into a better routine.
So, should you make your bed every morning?
My answer: only if it genuinely helps you.
If it gives you momentum, makes your space feel calmer, and helps you start the day with intention, keep doing it. If it’s just another chore you’re doing because productivity culture told you to, forget it.
The goal is not a perfect bed. The goal is a day that feels a little less chaotic and a little more yours.
And if you want to turn that into a habit you can actually stick with, try tracking it for a couple of weeks and see what happens. If you’re curious, give Trider a shot and see whether the habit helps your mornings—or whether you’re better off skipping straight to the coffee.