Last updated on · ⓘ How we make our designs
See how these pool house designs with bedrooms use cozy roofs, porches, and easy pool-to-bed layouts to make wet feet and an afternoon nap feel surprisingly well planned.
Pool houses with bedrooms change the whole mood of a backyard. We shaped these ideas from New England cottages, East Coast garden pavilions, Nordic cabins, barn forms, and a little French polish too, because wet feet deserve something better than a sad spare room.
As you go through them, look at the roofs, dormers, chimneys, and porches first. They’re the bits that make a small building feel cozy, settled, and just fancy enough without acting like it owns the place.
Pay attention to how the bedrooms tuck above a porch, open straight to the terrace, or hide behind crisp symmetry and neat garden edges. That easy step from pool to indoors is doing a lot here, and honestly, a good pool house should make a nap feel like a very reasonable plan.
Cottage Style Pool House

The steep metal roof and centered dormer give this pool house a crisp cottage look, with the bedroom tucked neatly above the porch like a very stylish secret. We shaped it to feel rooted in classic New England retreats, only cleaner and a little more polished for poolside living.
Black framed doors and windows sharpen the white siding, while the full front porch softens everything and makes the step from swim to indoors feel easy. The chimney, slim pool, and clipped plantings keep the whole setup calm and balanced, which matters when the water is already stealing a bit of the show.
Formal Garden Pool Pavilion

The crisp white siding, deep hipped cedar roof, and full height columns give this pool house a polished estate feel that’s hard not to like. It borrows from classic garden pavilions and East Coast manor houses, so the whole thing feels composed and just a little fancy in a good way.
That wide central opening is the magic trick, turning the lounge and bedroom into an easy extension of the pool terrace. Warm interior tones soften the formal shell, and the stone surround keeps everything clean and tailored, like it showed up wearing loafers.
Tailored Gable Guesthouse

The steep roofline and crisp white siding give this guesthouse a polished coastal feel, while the black framed windows keep it from getting too sweet. We love that balance, it feels classic but still sharp enough to hold its own next to a very tidy pool.
Stone paving runs straight to the French doors, which makes the whole setup feel easy and unfussy after a swim, no awkward wet footprints across the lawn. The chimney, skylight, and layered gables nod to old cottage architecture, and they make the bedroom above feel like a proper little escape rather than a fancy shed in denial.
Nordic Forest Swim Lodge

This pool house borrows from Nordic cabin design, with a crisp gable roof, honey toned timber framing, and white wall panels that keep it clean and relaxed. The black framed windows sharpen the look and open the bedroom straight onto the terrace, which is a pretty sweet setup for a guest stay.
The chimney gives the compact form a sense of permanence, so it feels like a real little retreat and not just a fancy place to stash towels. We love how the pale stone patio hugs the pool and meets the surrounding pines, making the whole design feel calm, private, and maybe just a tiny bit show offy.
Shingle Barn Guest Retreat

This pool house borrows the calm silhouette of a small barn, then softens it with cedar shingles, board and batten siding, and a porch that feels ready for wet towels and late coffee. We love how the upstairs bedroom tucks under the roof, because that compact shape keeps the guest suite cozy instead of trying too hard.
Black framed doors and warm taupe trim give the exterior a crisp edge, while the deep overhangs and sturdy brackets make the deck more usable when the weather gets a bit bossy. It is a practical little charmer, polished but not fussy, and the kind of place that makes one night somehow turn into three.
Hamptons Porchside Hideaway

This pool house leans into a crisp East Coast look with white clapboard siding, black shutters, and a covered porch that feels ready for bare feet and wet towels. We gave it a gently flared roof and centered French doors so the front stays calm and balanced, not fussy.
That porch does more than look pretty, because it gives the bedroom a real front door moment and a shaded place to pause after a swim. Stone paving, neat shrubs, and simple lanterns keep it polished but easygoing, which is harder than it sounds and a little bit magic.
Lowcountry Portico Garden House

The crisp white guest cottage leans into Lowcountry tradition with a porch that feels almost classical, complete with slim columns, black shutters, and a clean front gable. We paired that tidy symmetry with a narrow lap pool, and it gives the whole setup a bigger presence without any showing off.
Lush planting wraps the house in palms, hydrangeas, and roses, which softens the formal facade so the bedroom retreat feels private and easygoing. The centered door and balanced windows make the approach feel calm and clear, and that matters more than people think when everyone is damp, barefoot, and just trying to get inside.
Black Frame Swim Casita

This little poolside casita keeps things crisp with white lap siding, a steep metal roof, and black framed sliders that make the front feel tailored without getting fussy. We pulled from farmhouse simplicity and cleaned it up, so it feels fresh and calm, kind of like a guest room that remembered to put on good shoes.
Tall glazing at the bedroom end helps the compact footprint read a bit bigger, while the sheltered entry creates a gentle pause between swim time and flop on the chair time. The pale stone terrace, soft grasses, and teak loungers keep the whole palette easy on the eyes, and honestly, it is almost annoyingly good at looking neat.
Clapboard Poolside Guest Quarters

This poolside guest quarters leans into classic New England lines with crisp white siding, a steep roof, and divided glass doors that make the whole thing feel polished but never fussy. We love how the dark shingles sharpen the silhouette a bit, like the cottage put on its good jacket for summer.
The symmetry up front, paired lanterns, and neatly clipped planters give it that settled, intentional look that always reads timeless around a pool. A pale stone terrace and simple pergola keep the mood easy and breezy, which is exactly what you want when wet feet are part of the floor plan.
Arched Veranda Swim House

This pool house leans into a storybook cottage mood with its steep twin gables crisp white siding and that tall chimney that gives it a little swagger. We shaped the porch with soft arch braces so the front feels welcoming instead of stiff and a bit dressed up without trying too hard.
The cedar shake roof and slim black gutters add just enough contrast to keep the silhouette sharp against the trees. That covered sitting area matters more than people think since it turns a quick swim stop into a place to linger and the fireplace tucked under the porch is a very good excuse to stay put.
Stone Hearth Pool Cabin

The blue siding, white trim, and steep black metal roof give this pool house a tucked away cottage feel that is super charming without trying too hard. We pulled from old woodland cabins for the mood, then added a front porch and dormer window so the upper bedroom gets its own cozy little moment.
That tall stone chimney is the anchor, and it keeps the whole design from feeling too sweet, which yes, small houses can totally do. Warm timber posts, French doors, and the wrap of decking make it easy to move from swim to shower to nap with almost suspicious ease.
Cedar Portal Sleepout

This pool house keeps the silhouette simple, with a classic pitched roof, white board and batten siding, and a cedar framed opening that warms up the whole facade. Those wide sliders make the bedroom feel connected to the terrace and water, so it shifts from private retreat to laid back lounge in about two seconds.
We took cues from rural guest cottages and gave them a cleaner, more tailored finish, which keeps the look calm without feeling flat. The upper window, exposed beams, and low patio setup add just enough charm, and yes, it’s the kind of place that makes a nap sound like a very solid plan.
Pillared Dormer Villa

This pool house leans into classic American country house charm with its crisp white siding, steep rooflines, and that centered portico that feels just a little dressed up in the best way. The twin dormers and tall chimney give the upper bedroom a proper sense of presence, so it reads more like a tiny estate house than a simple backyard add on.
We loved shaping the facade around symmetry because it makes everything feel settled and calm, especially from the pool terrace. Multi pane doors, neatly trimmed shutters, and clipped garden borders keep the whole thing polished without getting too fussy, which is nice because nobody wants their swimsuit judged by the architecture.
Hydrangea Trellis Guest Cottage

The design borrows from a classic New England garden cottage, with crisp lap siding, a steep standing seam roof, and a front porch that feels instantly settled in. That simple roofline matters because it gives the bedroom level room to breathe upstairs without making the little house look fussy or oversized.
We love how the French doors, slim columns, and vine wrapped corner soften the structure and keep it friendly from the pool terrace. Every detail is tuned for easy summer living, from the sheltered sitting porch to the warm lantern lighting, and honestly it looks like the kind of place that politely suggests one more night.
Woodland Dormer Maisonette

Wrapped in pale stone and topped with weathered shingles, the pool house borrows from old estate cottages and trims the idea into something crisp. The centered dormer, tall chimney, and tucked porch give the facade a polished little grin, which feels right beside such a tailored pool.
We love how the symmetry keeps the composition calm, while the French doors and recessed entry make a compact footprint feel surprisingly grand. Boxwood borders, soft flowering shrubs, and that steep roof line help the upstairs sleeping area feel natural, not squeezed in, and honestly the whole place looks ready for a very stylish nap.
Porch Loft Garden Bungalow

The steep roofline and crisp white board and batten siding give this poolside bungalow a clean country feel that lands somewhere between a barn and a garden cottage. We paired the dark standing seam roof with slender windows and warm copper gutters, and that contrast keeps the whole place looking sharp without getting fussy.
The covered porch runs right to the pool edge, so the bedroom feels connected to the water while still keeping a bit of privacy, which is honestly a neat trick. Tucked into thick trees and soft planting, the design takes cues from New England outbuildings and turns them into something cozy, polished, and very easy to like.
Cupola Courtyard Hideaway

This pool house leans into a polished East Coast look with crisp white walls, inky shutters, and a little cupola perched on the hipped roof like the cherry on top. We shaped it around strong symmetry and neat garden edges, which gives the whole place that calm, collected vibe people always want near the water.
French doors, transom glazing, and brick steps make the entry feel welcoming without getting fussy, while the tall chimney hints at a bedroom suite that stays cozy after an evening swim. The clipped hedges and black lanterns sharpen the facade just enough, because a pool house should feel relaxed but still show up looking pretty put together.
Classical Plunge Manor

This pool house leans into crisp classical lines with a full front porch, round columns, and a centered pediment that gives the facade a very polished kind of confidence. The tall middle window stretches the elevation upward, which keeps the compact footprint from feeling squat or fussy, and that is a neat little trick.
We took cues from old garden pavilions and refined estate outbuildings, then cleaned everything up with pale siding and a standing seam roof that feels fresh without trying too hard. The symmetry matters here because it calms the whole pool setting, and the warm wood door keeps it from getting too proper, which is nice because no one wants a pool house with a permanent stiff collar.
Parisian Oculus Guesthouse

The design leans into a polished French manor mood, with a sweeping hipped roof, creamy painted brick, and that cheeky oval dormer perched up top like a fancy eyebrow. We love how the chunky cornice and square columns give the front a composed face that feels elegant without getting too proper.
Black framed doors sharpen the whole look and keep the pale palette from feeling too sweet, while the covered terrace makes the bedroom inside feel tucked away and private. The clipped hedges, striped umbrellas, and straight stone paving all support that tidy symmetry, which is basically candy for anyone who likes a backyard that behaves itself.
Regency Colonnade Swim Retreat

This pool house leans into crisp neoclassical lines, with a temple like front, tall columns, and charcoal shutters that keep the white facade from feeling too precious. We borrowed from Regency era garden buildings, then softened the look with climbing vines and hydrangeas so it feels polished but not fussy.
The centered French doors, matching windows, and pedimented entry give the whole composition a calm balanced feel, which is basically the architectural version of taking a deep breath. Out front, the raised spa and pale stone terrace extend that order right to the water, and the result is elegant in a very unfussy way.
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