That headline usually refers to fire safety, not something mysterious — and it’s actually based on real safety research.
The warning comes from fire safety experts like the Fire Safety Research Institute, formerly part of UL. Their testing showed that sleeping with your bedroom door closed can significantly slow the spread of fire, smoke, and toxic gases.
🔥 Why Sleeping With the Door Open Can Be Dangerous
Modern homes contain more synthetic materials (plastics, foam, treated fabrics). These burn:
- Hotter
- Faster
- With more toxic smoke
In a fire, you may have less than 3 minutes to escape in some cases.
An open bedroom door allows:
- Smoke to fill the room quickly
- Temperatures to rise rapidly
- Toxic gases (like carbon monoxide) to accumulate faster
🚪 What a Closed Door Can Do
Fire testing has shown that a closed door can:
- Keep room temperatures hundreds of degrees cooler
- Reduce smoke exposure
- Maintain higher oxygen levels
- Provide extra time to escape
Even a simple hollow-core door makes a big difference.
🛏️ So Should You Close Your Door?
From a fire safety standpoint:
Yes — closing your bedroom door at night is safer.
Also important:
- Working smoke alarms (inside and outside bedrooms)
- A home fire escape plan
- Testing alarms monthly
⚠️ Exceptions
Some people leave doors open for:
- Monitoring young children
- Hearing elderly family members
- Pets
In those cases, consider:
- Interconnected smoke alarms
- Baby monitors
- Fire-safe planning
Bottom Line
The “warning” isn’t fear-based clickbait — it’s about fire survival time. Closing your bedroom door at night can meaningfully improve safety.
If you’d like, I can explain why modern fires burn faster than older ones — it’s surprising and important.