At 73.25 inches wide, Belton fits where a full sofa won't, and still opens to a queen bed. The track arms and clean contemporary profile mean it disappears into a room rather than anchoring it. If you've been looking for a queen sleeper that doesn't announce itself, this is a good candidate.
The Level mechanism is intentionally simple. Set the back cushions aside, lift the seat in one motion, and the bed lays out. Gas-spring assistance does the heavy work, so the conversion doesn't require a partner or a technique. It opens away from the wall, so you'll want about 90 inches of clearance behind it. No secondary fold, no tools, no sequence to learn.
The bed is a 60 by 80 inch queen. The built-in mattress is five inches of cold-cured high-density foam, CertiPUR certified, rated Daily Sleeper. The seat foam is medium density, which means neither the sitting experience nor the sleeping surface asks you to make a compromise. Both are designed for sustained use, not just occasional occupancy.
Solid spruce with mortise-and-tenon joinery and birch plywood, FSC and PEFC certified. Made in the EU, made to order, four to six weeks out. Over a hundred fabric and leather options are available; you'll configure at point of sale.
If the Belton silhouette is right for your space, the Belton Queen and Queen Loveseat sit in the same 73-inch frame, with the distinction being largely in SKU configuration and display options. For the same queen bed with a different opening sequence, look at the Casey Queen Loveseat: it uses the Hybrid two-step lift and runs slightly narrower at 74.5 inches as a sofa-scale piece.