Best Blackout Curtains for Bedroom (Thermal + 100% Block, 2026)
By Erin Mitchell · Updated June 2026
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Quick Take
For a bedroom that needs the lights out by 6am in summer, the NICETOWN triple-weave grommet panel is the default pick at around $22 per pair. It blocks roughly 85-99% of light on its own and adds a real thermal feel against a cold window. If a room must be fully dark for shift sleep or infant naps, step up to the 100% Blackout Shield panel, which sews a black-coated liner behind the face fabric (that liner is what actually gets a room to dark-room dark).
Two sizing rules matter more than brand choice. Buy panel width equal to at least 2x the window width so the fabric gathers instead of stretching flat. And mount the rod 4-8 inches above the trim and wider than the frame on both sides, so light cannot leak around the edges. A perfect panel on a tight rod will still leave a halo at the sides.
Jump to the grommet, back-tab, and rod-pocket panels that actually black out a bedroom at three different price tiers below. See picks ↓

Blackout curtain marketing is unreliable. Every panel on Amazon advertises "100% blackout," but the honest answer is that a single layer of woven polyester, no matter how tightly woven, will leak some light at the weave. True 100% requires a separate black-coated liner behind the face fabric. Without one, the realistic range is 85-99% depending on how thick the triple weave actually is.
That is fine for most bedrooms. 90% block plus rod placement that closes the side gaps is dark enough for normal sleep. The harder cases are shift workers, infant naps, and east-facing summer bedrooms in cities with 5am sunrise. Those rooms need the liner-backed panels.
Triple-weave vs double-layer with a liner
Most blackout panels under $30 use a triple-weave construction: three layers of polyester yarn woven together so light has to pass through three interlocked planes. That gets to roughly 85-99% block on its own. The weave is thicker on heavier panels (NICETOWN, Best Home Fashion) and thinner on lighter ones (Deconovo, ChrisDowa).
Double-layer panels with a black-coated liner are a different category. The face fabric is normal polyester, then a second layer of fabric with a matte black acrylic or foam coating is sewn behind it. That coating is what actually stops the last percent of light. The 100% Blackout Shield panel uses this construction, which is why it claims true blackout where the triple-weave panels claim near-blackout.
Grommet vs back-tab vs rod-pocket headers
Grommet is the most common header. Metal rings punched through the top hem slide on a standard rod. Opens and closes easily, drapes in even folds, leaves a small gap at the top where light can leak through the rings.
Back-tab uses fabric loops sewn to the back of the panel. The rod feeds through the loops, which keeps the rod hidden from the front and gives a cleaner top edge with less top-of-panel light leak. Trade-off: harder to open and close, the loops bind on the rod over time.
Rod-pocket is a sewn channel at the top of the panel that the rod feeds through. Cheapest construction, looks the most casual, and the panel does not slide easily once it is up. Fine for panels that stay closed during sleep hours and only open during the day, less good for daily-use windows.
Sizing: panel width should be at least 2x the window
The most common mistake is buying a panel set the same width as the window. A 52-inch panel on a 52-inch window stretches flat and leaks light at every weave point because the fabric is under tension. Buy panel width equal to 2x the window width, which lets the fabric gather into folds. The folds double up the fabric layers and stop light far better than a flat single layer.
Length is more forgiving. Standard panel lengths are 63, 84, 96, and 108 inches. Buy long enough that the panel reaches the floor or pools by an inch or two. A panel that hovers above the floor leaves a horizontal light strip that defeats the purpose.
Rod placement closes the side leak
Mount the rod 4-8 inches above the window trim and extend it 4-6 inches wider than the window frame on each side. The wider rod lets the panels close past the window edge, which kills the vertical light leak that ruins most blackout setups. A perfect panel on a tight rod will still leave a halo at the edges because the fabric is flush against the window opening.
Thermal insulation as a bonus
Triple-weave and liner-backed panels both add a thermal layer at the window. The R-value gain is real but modest. The bigger effect is on drafts: a heavy panel that touches the floor and seals at the rod cuts the convective air current that runs down a cold pane in winter. NICETOWN and Best Home Fashion read the heaviest in hand and produce the most noticeable thermal effect. Deconovo and the lighter ChrisDowa panels are blackout-first and thermal-second.
Color choice matters for actual blackout
Darker panels block more light than lighter panels in the same construction. A white triple-weave still passes more light through the weave than a black or charcoal version of the same panel, because the lighter dye reflects less. If the goal is maximum darkness, pick a dark color. If aesthetics win, accept that a beige or white blackout will be closer to 85% block than 99%.
When to step up to the liner-backed pick
Most bedrooms do not need the 100% Blackout Shield panel. The triple-weave NICETOWN at a third the price is enough darkness for normal sleep, especially with the rod placement and width rules above. Step up if any of the following apply: shift work that needs daytime sleep, an infant or toddler napping in the room, an east-facing window with summer sunrise before 6am, or migraine sensitivity that needs true dark.
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Amazon reviews by pick
Verbatim verified-buyer feedback for each of the products recommended above. Read the full review threads on Amazon via the links below.
NICETOWN Thermal Insulated Grommet Blackout Curtains (Set of 2)
★★★★★4.8 from 78,372 Amazon reviews
“Honestly, I didn't have much hope for these, but they really are blackout curtains! I bought the white ones, and I cannot believe how perfect they are. The curtains are quite thick with two layers, but not too heavy. They came creased (of course) but a quick steam was able to remove most of the creases. They look really nice and I can tell that my rooms are better insulated. That said, my room is not completely blackout but that is user error. To help other buyers, this is my advice-”
— Kat, verified Amazon buyer
“I’m very impressed with these NICETOWN window curtain panels. The fabric feels thick and high-quality, and they instantly made my space look more elegant and cozy. They do a great job blocking out light, which is perfect for better sleep and privacy.”
— Gipsy Navarro, verified Amazon buyer
“These curtains are very thick and high quality. The blackout effect is excellent — they block almost all the sunlight and make the room much darker, which is perfect for sleeping. The fabric feels durable and heavy, not cheap at all. Very happy with this purchase!”
— Annie, verified Amazon buyer
100% Blackout Shield Back Tab/Rod Pocket Blackout Curtains, 84" Long
★★★★★4.6 from 7,548 Amazon reviews
“A few months ago my landlord installed a floodlight directly outside my bedroom window. At night the light reflected into my room and made it difficult to fall asleep. I needed true blackout curtains, not just something decorative.”
— Jennifer, verified Amazon buyer
“These curtains are absolutely beautiful and made a noticeable difference in my room as soon as I put them up. The fabric feels thick and high-quality, not cheap or see-through, and it gives the space a much more elegant and cozy look.”
— N. Ferrera, verified Amazon buyer
“If you have a baby or are sensitive to light when you sleep you NEED these curtains. I was so impressed by their quality upon opening them. They are linen and look light and stylish, it’s not at all visually obvious that they are blackout curtains which I love! The liner is super effective and blocks out light perfectly. This is not the point of the curtains but if you have cats or otherwise destructive forces in your home these are great because they are so durable. Lol highly recommend!”
— Stephanie D, verified Amazon buyer
Best Home Fashion Thermal Insulated Blackout Curtains, 52"W x 84"L (Set of 2)
★★★★★4.7 from 5,157 Amazon reviews
“The quality of the fabric on these curtains is better than I expected. They're thick, soft, with a very fine weave and a nice drape. These curtains would be beautiful for most home applications. They don't scream "over the top luxury" but they do whisper "pragmatic prosperity," which is often better, because who wants floor to ceiling opulent drapery in EVERY room?”
— Ryan Specht, verified Amazon buyer
“I live in the Phoenix area and work nights. These are the best, hands down at both keeping the room dark and cooler. We have these on every window in our apartment, both to cut the light and the A/C bill. They don't have that ugly plastic look of a lot of blackout curtains they actually feel very soft and thick. They also wash beautifully. I recommend only drying for 10-15 and hanging still warm, no wrinkles.”
— ShadowKat, verified Amazon buyer
“These look great on my windows. The tops of my window flange (inside) is about a couple of inches above this product's vertical measurement, which is just about perfect. Nothing's touching the floor, but at the same time, the curtains don't look too short. I'd ordered two packs of these for two windows, and both appeared to be about the same length, and width.”
— Amazon Customer, verified Amazon buyer
ChrisDowa Grommet Blackout Curtains for Bedroom
★★★★★4.6 from 29,753 Amazon reviews
“Super pretty pink color. Doesn’t let much light peak through so it gets the room pretty dark. It’s a nice fabric too very soft.”
— Kristin Stonebarger, verified Amazon buyer
“Curtains are nice. They look good, easy to install. They are not full blackout curtains. If you are looking for full black out, you will be disappointed. However these are perfect for my needs. Keeps the room dark enough so that I can sleep.”
— Schmancy, verified Amazon buyer
“They are light weight but works great. It keeps the light out and it was cheaper than the others.”
— Amazon Customer, verified Amazon buyer
Deconovo Thermal Insulated Rod Pocket Blackout Curtains
★★★★★4.6 from 33,418 Amazon reviews
“These are the perfect curtains. They are great quality, look nice and they block out light. A bonus - fantastic price. I would definitely order more!”
— Rebecca, verified Amazon buyer
“I really like these curtains. They block out the light and just the right length. There was no odor from them. I’m very happy with my purchase.”
— RDodwell, verified Amazon buyer
“Great blackout curtains! Keeps a very great amount of light out of my babies rooms! Easy to hang. Picture attached to review is from morning time, full sun out in Hawaii during the summer. They block a lot of light out and keep the room dark enough for my babies to sleep well into the morning.”
— JLZA, verified Amazon buyer






