Greaton Wood Bed Slats for Every Frame Size

Greaton's bed slat line covers two jobs: individual replacement slat sets that drop into an existing frame with no tools, and solid wood bunkie board panels that close the gaps between slats entirely. Both are built from wood, lay flat without adding meaningful height, and are available from twin through California king. If your mattress is sinking between slats, shifting overnight, or your old foundation gave out, these are the direct fix.

✓ Wood construction✓ No added height✓ No assembly required
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All Bed Slat and Bunkie Board Options

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Queen Bed Slats Standard No Cover

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Queen Bed Slats Heavy Duty Cover

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Twin Bed Slats Heavy Duty No Cover

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Cal King Bed Slats No Cover

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King Mega Slats Extra Heavy Duty

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Queen Mega Slats Extra Heavy Duty

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Extra Heavy Duty Horizontal Wooden

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Extra Heavy Duty Horizontal Wooden

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Heavy Duty Vertical Wooden Bunkie

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Extra Heavy Duty Horizontal Wooden

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Horizontal Wooden Bunkie Board/Bed Slats

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Heavy Duty Vertical Wooden Bunkie

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Slat and Bunkie Board Specifications by Size

Every product in this line is wood construction with no assembly required (or simple lay-in installation). Use the thickness and width specs to match your frame and mattress type.

Model Size Dimensions (L × W × Thickness) Weight Best For
Individual Slat Set — Standard Width (2.38") Queen 78" × 60.5" × 0.68" 25.4 lbs Replacing worn slats in a standard queen frame; lighter load setups
Individual Slat Set — Heavy Duty (3.38"), Covered Queen 78" × 60" × 0.75" 34 lbs Queen frames needing wider, fabric-covered slats to reduce mattress shift
Individual Slat Set — Heavy Duty (3.38") Twin 72" × 39" × 0.68" 14 lbs Twin frame replacement; bunk beds; lighter single-sleeper setups
Individual Slat Set — Heavy Duty (3.38") California King 83" × 72" × 0.68" 33 lbs Cal king frames; wide span support without added height
Bunkie Board — 1" Extra Heavy Duty Horizontal (Mega Slat) King 78" × 76" × 1" 48 lbs King platform beds; two-adult setups; dense foam mattresses
Bunkie Board — 1" Extra Heavy Duty Horizontal (Mega Slat) Queen 78" × 60.5" × 1" 38 lbs Queen platform beds; foam mattresses needing a fully even surface
Bunkie Board — 1" Extra Heavy Duty Horizontal (Mega Slat) Full 72" × 54" × 1" 32 lbs Full frames; bunk beds; heavier single or couple setups
Bunkie Board — 1" Extra Heavy Duty Horizontal (Mega Slat) California King 80.5" × 72" × 1" 45 lbs Cal king platform beds; maximum flat support for wide-span frames
Bunkie Board — 0.75" Heavy Duty Vertical (Grey) Full XL 73" × 53" × 0.75" 27 lbs Full/Full XL frames; mid-weight loads; vertical board orientation
Bunkie Board — 1" Extra Heavy Duty Horizontal (Mega Slat) Twin 72" × 39" × 1" 19 lbs Twin bunk beds; kids' frames; single sleepers on platform beds
Bunkie Board — 0.68" Horizontal (Standard, Beige) Full 72" × 54" × 0.68" 20 lbs Full frames where minimum height addition is the priority
Bunkie Board — 0.68" Heavy Duty Vertical (Beige) Full 73" × 54" × 0.68" 28.2 lbs Full frames; vertical orientation for added rigidity along mattress length

If your main concern is closing slat gaps under a foam mattress, any bunkie board in the correct size will do the job — step up to the 1" Extra Heavy Duty panel if you're supporting a heavier load or want the most rigid surface. If you're replacing individual broken slats in a frame that already has a ledge system, match the slat set to your bed size and the standard 0.68"–0.75" thickness will fit correctly.

How to Pick the Right Slat Option for Your Frame

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The first decision is whether you need individual replacement slats or a full bunkie board panel. Individual slat sets — the Standard Width (2.38") and Heavy Duty (3.38") configurations — ship as a set of separate wood boards you lay across your frame's side rails. They're the right choice when your existing frame has rail supports or ledges designed to hold individual slats, and you want a direct, no-fuss replacement. The 2.38"-wide queen set (78" × 60.5" × 0.68") is the lighter option at 25.4 lbs; the 3.38"-wide heavy duty queen (78" × 60" × 0.75") is noticeably more substantial at 34 lbs, which matters if you're moving the bed frequently or have a heavier combined mattress and sleeper load.

Bunkie boards — the 0.68", 0.75", and 1" solid panels — are a different solution. Instead of individual boards with gaps between them, a bunkie board is one continuous (or near-continuous) wooden surface. This is the correct choice when your mattress is sinking into the spaces between slats, when your frame's rail spacing is too wide for a standard mattress, or when you want the mattress to sit on something completely even. Greaton's Extra Heavy Duty 1" bunkie boards (the "Mega Slat" series) are the heaviest and most rigid option — the queen-size panel alone weighs 38 lbs — and they're the ones to reach for if you're supporting a heavy foam or hybrid mattress, or if two adults are sharing the bed.

Thickness also drives the choice when total bed height is a constraint. The 0.68" boards add less than three-quarters of an inch to your setup. The 0.75" boards add a hair more. The 1" Extra Heavy Duty panels add exactly one inch. None of these will make you feel like you're climbing into the bed — but if you're already on a tall frame or a tall mattress and want to minimize height change, start with the 0.68" option. Sizing is straightforward: match the listed dimensions to your frame's interior measurements. "Queen" in this line means 60"–60.5" wide and 78" long; "California King" means 72" wide and 83"–80.5" long depending on the product. Always measure your frame before ordering.

  • Need individual replacement boards: Standard Width (2.38") or Heavy Duty (3.38") slat sets
  • Mattress sinking between gaps: Any bunkie board panel (0.68", 0.75", or 1")
  • Heaviest load, most rigid support: 1" Extra Heavy Duty Mega Slat bunkie boards
  • Minimal height addition: 0.68" horizontal bunkie board or Standard Width slat set
  • Vertical vs. horizontal: Horizontal panels have boards running side-to-side; vertical panels run head-to-foot — both work, but vertical orientation can add structural rigidity along the long axis of the mattress

Which Setup These Slats Actually Work With

Greaton's individual slat sets are designed for frames that already have a rail and ledge system — the type where slats sit in a groove or rest on an inner lip running the length of each side rail. Platform bed frames from IKEA, Amazon basics lines, and most mid-range wood bed frames use this setup. If your frame came with slats originally and you're replacing broken or missing ones, the individual sets are a clean match. The queen set at 78" long covers the full interior of a standard queen frame; the twin set at 72" × 39" covers a standard twin. No assembly is needed — the slats lay in place.

Bunkie boards are the right solution for three distinct setups: (1) frames with wide rail spacing where a standard mattress sags between the gaps, (2) box spring-free platform beds where you want a solid, even surface under a foam or memory foam mattress, and (3) bunk beds where a thin, rigid panel is preferable to a full box spring. The Full-size 0.68" horizontal board (72" × 54") and the beige Full vertical board (73" × 54" × 0.68") are sized for standard full bunk frames. The 0.75" vertical grey Full board (73" × 53") falls in the same category but lists as "Full XL" — measure carefully if you're fitting a bunk frame, since that half-inch in width can matter.

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A note on foam mattresses specifically: memory foam and gel foam mattresses are more sensitive to support surface gaps than innerspring mattresses. A 2"–3" gap between individual slats will eventually show as a soft spot or uneven wear in a foam mattress. If you're running any foam mattress — including a standard home memory foam — on a slatted frame, a bunkie board panel is a better long-term choice than individual slats. The individual slat sets work well under innerspring mattresses, which distribute weight more evenly across their coil grid and are less vulnerable to localized gap pressure.

Care, Common Mistakes, and Making Slats Last

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Wood bed slats and bunkie boards require almost no maintenance, but there are two common mistakes that shorten their life: moisture and movement. Solid wood will absorb humidity over time if the area under the bed is consistently damp — this matters most in basement bedrooms, older homes without climate control, or any space that runs humid in summer. The fix is straightforward: ensure the room has reasonable airflow and avoid placing slats directly on a surface that holds condensation. If the underside of the mattress ever feels damp, that's a sign the area needs better ventilation, not a product defect.

The second issue is shifting. Individual slat sets that aren't attached to the frame can migrate toward the center of the bed over time, especially under a sleeper who moves a lot at night. This leaves gaps at the head or foot of the frame and creates uneven support. Greaton's covered slat designs include a fabric covering that helps hold the slat position — the cover grips the mattress bottom and resists the drift. For uncovered slat sets, a simple fix is a strip of non-slip rug pad material placed between the slat and the rail ledge. For bunkie boards, the panel's own weight generally keeps it in place; the queen 1" Mega Slat at 38 lbs isn't going anywhere on its own.

  • Cleaning: Wipe with a damp cloth. No soaking, no chemical cleaners on raw wood surfaces.
  • Weight limits: The 1" Extra Heavy Duty panels are the correct choice for heavier combined loads (two adults plus a dense foam mattress). The 0.68" standard slat sets are adequate for lighter setups or single sleepers.
  • Don't stack foundations: These slats replace a box spring or sit in a frame that needs slat support — they're not designed to go on top of an existing box spring or bunkie board. One support layer is correct.
  • Check frame compatibility before installing: If your frame has a center support leg but no side rail ledge system, individual slat sets won't have a surface to rest on. Bunkie boards need a rail perimeter to sit on — they're not freestanding.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the actual difference between the individual slat sets and the bunkie board panels?

Individual slat sets are exactly that — separate wood boards you lay across your frame's side rails, with gaps between each board. They're a direct replacement for the slats that came with your frame. Bunkie boards are a single solid (or near-solid) panel that covers the entire frame interior without gaps. If your mattress is sinking or developing soft spots between the boards, that's a gap problem — a bunkie board fixes it. If you just need to replace a broken or missing slat in a frame that otherwise works fine, the individual slat set is the right call.

Will these slats work under a memory foam or gel foam mattress?

Individual slat sets work, but with a caveat: foam mattresses are sensitive to gaps. If the spacing between your existing slats is wide, a foam mattress will eventually show soft spots or uneven wear at those gap points. For any foam mattress — memory foam, gel foam, or hybrid — a bunkie board panel is the better long-term support surface because it's solid and even. The 1" Extra Heavy Duty Mega Slat panels in particular are designed for exactly this use: a completely flat wood surface that gives foam mattresses the even base they need to hold their shape over time.

How much height do these add to my bed setup?

Less than one inch for every option in this line. The individual slat sets run 0.68"–0.75" thick. The bunkie board panels run 0.68", 0.75", or 1" thick. None of these will meaningfully change how high your bed sits — that's the point. These are not box springs, which add 4" to 15" depending on design. If you're replacing a box spring with one of these slat options because your bed is already too tall, you'll drop several inches of height while keeping solid mattress support.

Do the California king dimensions match both standard and California king frames?

No — California king and standard king are different sizes. The California king slat set measures 83" long × 72" wide; the standard king bunkie boards measure 78" long × 76" wide. California king frames are longer and narrower than standard king frames. Always check both dimensions against your frame's interior measurements before ordering. A standard king board will be too wide and too short for a California king frame, and vice versa.

Do I need tools to install these, and will they shift around after installation?

No tools are required — all of these products are designed to lay into the frame. For individual slat sets, the boards rest on the ledge or lip of the side rails. For bunkie boards, the panel sits on the rail perimeter and its own weight holds it in place. The heavier the panel (the 1" queen at 38 lbs, the 1" king at 48 lbs), the less movement is possible. For lighter individual slat sets on frames without a ledge groove, a strip of non-slip material between the slat and the rail is an easy way to prevent any drift. The covered slat sets include a fabric wrap that also helps hold position against the mattress bottom.

Can I use one of these bunkie boards in a bunk bed for a child?

Yes — the 1" Extra Heavy Duty Twin (72" × 39" × 1") is the right fit for a standard twin bunk frame and is the most rigid option in the line. At 19 lbs, it's manageable to move and install in a bunk setup. The solid wood construction holds up to the kind of repeated impact load that kids' bunk use involves. Just confirm your bunk frame's interior rail dimensions match the 72" × 39" footprint before ordering — bunk frames from different manufacturers vary, and a half-inch short in either direction will affect how the panel sits on the rails.