You've noticed it. Your dog walks up to the bed, does that little pre-jump crouch, and then just... stops. Maybe they circle a few times and try again. Maybe they sit at the foot of the bed and stare at you, waiting for a lift they didn't used to need.
Or maybe nothing's changed yet - you just have a tall platform bed and you're wondering if the daily jumping is something you should be thinking about.
Either way, you've probably come across dog steps and wondered if they're actually worth it, or just an unnecessary pet product. The honest answer is: it depends on your dog. Here's how to figure it out.
Signs Your Dog Actually Needs Steps for the Bed
Before buying anything, run through this list. If none of these apply, your dog might not need steps yet.
Your dog probably needs steps if:
- They hesitate before jumping, circle repeatedly, or need multiple attempts to make it up
- They used to jump up easily and have stopped, or are noticeably slower about it
- They're a small breed - Dachshunds, Chihuahuas, Shih Tzus, Maltese, and similar dogs absorb disproportionate joint impact every time they leap from a significant height
- They're 7 years or older, when joint stiffness typically begins even in otherwise healthy dogs
- They've been diagnosed with arthritis, hip dysplasia, or any joint condition
- They're recovering from surgery, an ACL tear, or a leg injury - in which case jumping is often explicitly prohibited by vets during recovery (more on this below)
- Your bed is unusually high; platform beds, tall frames, or thick mattress toppers can push the surface height above 24 inches, which is a significant leap for a small or aging dog
Your dog probably doesn't need steps yet if:
- They're young and healthy and jump up without hesitation or difficulty
- Your bed height is under 18 inches from floor to mattress surface
- There are no signs of joint stiffness, slowing down, or reluctance to jump
If your dog falls into the second category, steps aren't urgent, but they're worth keeping in mind as your dog ages. It's easier to introduce steps to a healthy dog than to a dog who's already in pain and reluctant to try something new.
If your dog is recovering from an ACL injury or surgery, steps aren't optional, they're part of the recovery setup. Jumping on and off furniture is one of the most common ways dogs re-injure a healing ACL. You can read our full guide to ACL surgery recovery and what to expect here.
Why High Beds Are Harder on Dogs Than Most People Realize
The jump up gets most of the attention. But the jump down is actually where most joint damage happens — and it's the one owners think about least.
When a dog jumps down from a high bed, they're absorbing the full impact of their body weight through their front legs and wrists on landing. For a 20-pound dog jumping from a 26-inch bed, that impact force is significant, and it compounds over time. Once a day, every day, for years.
Small breeds and seniors feel this disproportionately. Their joints have less cushioning, and they're often jumping from heights that are more extreme relative to their body size. A jump that looks easy might not feel that way.
What dog steps actually do is eliminate the jump entirely in both directions. Your dog walks up, walks down. No impact. No hesitation. This is the core reason vets recommend them for post-surgery recovery and arthritic dogs, and why many owners who introduce them for an aging dog wish they'd done it sooner.
How to Measure Your Bed and Choose the Right Step Size
This is the part most people skip, and it's the most important.
Dog steps are sized by height, and the goal is to get steps that reach close to your mattress surface. Too short, and your dog still has to make a small jump at the top. Too tall, and the steps are awkward and uncomfortable.
How to measure:
- Grab a tape measure
- Measure from the floor to the top of your mattress (not the frame, the actual sleeping surface)
- If you have a thick mattress topper, include that in the measurement
Step size guide:
A few things worth knowing:
- The step height should be close to your mattress height but doesn't need to be exact - a 1–2 inch gap at the top is fine and normal
- If you're right on the border between two sizes, go up rather than down
- Platform beds often look lower than they are because the frame is close to the ground, so measure carefully before assuming
What to Look for in Dog Steps for a High Bed
Not all dog steps are built the same. Here's what actually matters, in order of importance.
Material: foam vs. hard plastic vs. wood
Foam is the clear winner for dogs with joint concerns. High-density foam absorbs impact and is gentle on paws with every step, unlike hard plastic or wood which have no give. For a young, healthy dog this matters less. For a senior dog or one with arthritis, it matters a lot.
Hard plastic steps are cheaper and often more compact, but they're unforgiving and can be slippery. Wood looks nice but similarly offers no cushioning and tends to be heavier.
If joint health is why you're looking at steps in the first place, foam is the only material that makes sense.
Step width
The step surface needs to be wide enough for your dog's paws to land fully flat — not teetering on the edge. Check the listed width measurement, not just the overall footprint of the steps. A step that's too narrow creates instability and causes dogs to stop using them.
Non-slip base
This is non-negotiable if you have hardwood or tile floors. Steps that slide when your dog uses them will be abandoned within a few days. Look for a non-slip rubber or grip base on the bottom.
Weight rating
"Small dog steps" is a marketing term, not a specification. Always check the actual listed weight limit and make sure it's above your dog's weight - not close to it, above it. A dog near the weight limit creates unnecessary flexing and instability in the steps.
Washable cover
Dog steps next to a bed get used multiple times a day. A removable, machine-washable cover isn't a luxury, it's a practical requirement. Without it, you're looking at steps that get grimy fast with no easy way to clean them.
Curved vs. straight design
Standard straight steps have a uniform rise angle on every step. Curved steps reduce that angle, which means each step requires less leg extension. The difference is subtle for a healthy dog but meaningful for one with hip stiffness or limited mobility. If your dog has any joint issues, curved foam steps are worth the slight premium.
Our Recommendation — and Why
We make foam dog steps, so we're not a neutral party here. But here's what informed the design of our steps, and how to decide if they're right for your dog.
Our curved foam steps are built specifically for dogs with joint concerns and high furniture. The high-density foam absorbs impact on every step, the curved design reduces the angle of each rise, the non-slip base keeps them stable on smooth floors, and the plush cover is removable for machine washing.
They come in three sizes to match your bed height:
3-Step Curved Foam Dog Steps Best for beds up to 18" high. The most compact option, ideal for small breeds and dogs who need just a little help getting up. Dimensions: 22.4" L x 15.7" W x 15.7" H. Supports dogs up to 50 lbs.
4-Step Curved Foam Dog Steps Best for beds 18"–22" high — the most common size for standard and platform beds. Dimensions: 26" L x 15.7" W x 17.4" H. Supports dogs up to 50 lbs.
5-Step Curved Foam Dog Steps Best for beds 22" and above — tall platform beds, high frames, or thick mattresses. Also a good choice for larger dogs who benefit from a more gradual incline. Dimensions: 32" L x 15.7" W x 23.5" H. Supports dogs up to 50 lbs.
Getting Your Dog to Actually Use the Steps
This is the part most product pages skip, and it's where a lot of owners get frustrated.
Most dogs don't just start using steps immediately. They need time to figure out what they are, decide they're safe, and build the habit. Here's how to make that easier:
Don't force it. Place the steps next to the bed and let your dog sniff and investigate on their own terms. Rushing this step almost always backfires.
Use treats. Place a small treat on each step. Let your dog approach, take the treat, and walk away. Repeat a few times before encouraging them to go all the way up. The goal is to make the steps feel like a good thing, not a hurdle.
Guide them slowly the first few times. Once they're comfortable approaching, gently encourage them step by step — don't push or lift. Let them commit to each step before moving to the next.
Make sure there's no gap. Place the steps flush against the bed frame with no gap between the top step and the mattress. A gap creates a second small jump that undermines the whole point.
Be consistent. If you let your dog jump sometimes, either by lifting them or letting them leap up without the steps, they'll keep trying to do it that way. The steps only become a habit if they're the consistent path to the bed.
Most dogs adapt within 3–7 days. Senior dogs and anxious dogs can take up to two weeks. Patience matters more than technique here.
So, Are Dog Steps Worth It?
If your dog is hesitating, aging, a small breed doing big jumps, or recovering from any kind of injury: yes, without much debate.
If your dog is young, healthy, jumping easily, and your bed isn't particularly high: probably not yet, but it's worth revisiting as they get older.
The thing most owners say in hindsight is that they wish they'd introduced steps earlier, when their dog was still healthy enough to learn them quickly. A dog in pain or with significant joint stiffness takes longer to adapt and may resist them initially.
If you've decided steps make sense for your dog, our curved foam steps were designed specifically for dogs that need joint-friendly mobility support. You can find all three sizes, along with our full size guide here.

