Gaming How-To

How to Make the Straw Bed in Minecraft (26.3 Update)

Craft four consumable Straw Beds from three Hay Bales to skip the night without moving your spawn point.

Craft four consumable Straw Beds from three Hay Bales to skip the night without moving your spawn point.

The Straw Bed is a consumable bed variant coming to Minecraft with the 26.3 game drop this fall. It lets you sleep through the night in the Overworld while leaving your existing spawn point untouched, which solves a long-standing headache for players who travel far from home and don’t want to reset where they respawn. The feature is currently experimental and can still change before release.

Quick answer: Place three Hay Bales in a single horizontal row on a crafting table to get four Straw Beds. Put one on the ground, sleep at night or during a thunderstorm, and it breaks after use without changing your spawn point.


What the Straw Bed Does

A Straw Bed works like a normal bed for passing the night, but it is single-use. Once you finish sleeping, or leave mid-sleep, the block breaks and disappears without dropping anything. The key difference is that it never registers as your respawn location, so your last regular bed (or the world spawn) stays in effect after you use one.

Sleeping in a Straw Bed clears rain and thunderstorms and stops phantoms from spawning for three in-game days, exactly like a standard bed. It sits lower and flatter than a wool bed, with a straw pillow, and it stacks up to 16 in your inventory, so a small pile covers a long expedition.

PropertyDetail
Stack size16
UsesSingle-use (breaks after sleeping)
Spawn pointNot set
WeatherClears rain and thunderstorms
PhantomsSuppressed for three in-game days
Tool neededAny tool or bare hand

Materials for the Straw Bed

You only need Hay Bales. No wool, no planks, and no rare drops. Three Hay Bales are enough for a full batch of beds.

ItemAmountWhere to Get
Hay Bale
Hay Bale
3xCraft from nine Wheat, or find them in villages

Each Hay Bale is made by filling the entire 3×3 crafting grid with nine Wheat. If you keep a wheat farm running, mass-producing Hay Bales is quick, and since wheat regrows fast, Straw Beds are fully renewable. You can also grab Hay Bales straight from villages, where they commonly sit near animal pens and horse stables, and break them by hand.

Hay Bale Crafting Recipe Minecraft
Nine Wheat makes one Hay Bale.

Crafting Recipe for the Straw Bed

Open a crafting table so you have the full 3×3 grid available.
Place three Hay Bales side by side across any single horizontal row. The row you use does not matter, as long as all three sit in a straight line.
Take the four Straw Beds from the result slot and drop them into your inventory. Three Hay Bales into four beds is one of the more generous crafting ratios in the game.
How to Make Straw Beds in Minecraft Crafting Recipe
Three Hay Bales in a row yield four Straw Beds.

Finding Straw Beds in Abandoned Camps

If you would rather skip crafting, Straw Beds generate naturally inside Abandoned Camps, a new structure added in the 26.3 update. These camps act as temporary shelters scattered across the Overworld, and there is a special one to look for inside the Dappled Forest biome. Break a placed Straw Bed with your hand before sleeping in it and it drops as an item you can carry away.


How to Use a Straw Bed

Place the Straw Bed on the ground the same way you would a normal bed. It needs clear space around it, and the foot of the bed lands at your feet with the head pointing away.
Wait for night to fall, or for a thunderstorm. You can only sleep during those conditions, just like with a regular bed.
Interact with the bed to lie down. Once morning arrives, or the moment you leave the bed early, the Straw Bed breaks and vanishes with no item drop.
How to Use Straw Beds to sleep

You know it worked when the night passes and your spawn point stays where it was. There is no “Respawn point set” message, because the Straw Bed intentionally never claims that role. If you placed one but never slept in it, you can mine it back with any tool to reuse later.


Behavior in the Nether, End, and With Villagers

Straw Beds only support sleeping in the Overworld. Attempting to use one in the Nether or the End makes it destroy itself and drop nothing, as though you had slept in it. This differs from a normal bed or a respawn anchor, which explode in the wrong dimension.

Villagers ignore Straw Beds completely. They will not claim one, sleep in one, or count it toward the conditions needed for breeding, so a Straw Bed is no substitute for a proper wool bed in a village. You can also drop a Straw Bed into a composter, where it has a 65% chance to raise the compost level by one.

SituationResult
Sleep in the OverworldNight passes, bed breaks, spawn unchanged
Use in the Nether or EndBed vanishes instantly, no explosion
Placed but never slept inBreak it to recover the item
Villager interactionIgnored entirely
Composter65% chance to add one level

The practical loop is simple. Keep a proper wool bed at your main base to hold your spawn, then carry a stack of Straw Beds for the road. Drop one whenever night catches you far from home, sleep through the danger, and move on the next morning without ever losing your respawn anchor. Because it costs only wheat, it is cheap insurance for long trips, temporary bases, and shared multiplayer shelters where nobody wants to overwrite anyone else’s spawn.