Joydeco Blackout Curtains Review – Do They Actually Block Light?

Joydeco Blackout Curtains for Bedroom 84 Inch - Black Out Curtains with Grommets Thermal Insulated Room Darkening Light Blocking, Noise Reducing & Wrinkle-Free Drapes for Living Room Windows, 2 Panels
Joydeco
- Premium & Easy-Care Fabric: These blackout curtains are crafted from high-quality, 100% Polyester microfiber. These curtains are durable, naturally wrinkle-resistant, and machine washable (recommended in a mesh bag). Avoid bleach for vibrant, long-lasting color.
- Superior Blackout & Energy Savings: Black out curtains feature triple-weave technology for professional-grade light blocking. Dark colors curtains block 80%+ of sunlight; light colors curtains block 60%+. Creates ideal darkness for sleep or naps. Thermal insulation helps regulate room temperature, reducing energy costs year-round.
- Versatile Size & Style Options: These window curtains are available in 20+ sizes (from 42" W x 63" L to 84" L, 52" W x 45" L to 120"L, 70" W x 90" L to 108" L) and 20+ stylish colors. Perfectly match any bedroom or living room decor. Includes sophisticated options like Burgundy Black.
- Effective Noise Reduction: Joydeco blackout curtains for bedroom have dense fabric construction, effectively absorbing over 35% of outside noise. Ideal for light sleepers, apartment living, and creating peaceful nurseries.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Triple-weave fabric genuinely blocks 80%+ of sunlight in dark colors
- Thermal insulation helped keep the room noticeably cooler in afternoon heat
- Dense microfiber construction absorbed roughly a third of street noise
- Grommets slide smoothly; no stuck rods or squeaky rings after a week of use
- Wrinkle-resistant — came out of the mesh wash bag looking presentable
Cons
- Light colors only block ~60% — not ideal if you need total darkness
- No curtain rod included; budget an extra $15-30 if yours isn't already up
- Edges let in a sliver of light around the rod brackets on sunny mornings
- Ironing or a steamer is required to fully smooth out shipping creases
Quick Verdict
If you're researching Joydeco blackout curtains because early mornings are wrecking your sleep, here's the short version: they work, and in dark colors the light blocking is genuinely impressive — closer to 85% in practice. Thermal performance is a pleasant bonus, noise reduction is modest but measurable, and the grommet setup means you can hang them without wrestling with clip rings. They're not perfect — light colors leave plenty of gap for a sunlit room, and you'll want a steamer to kill the shipping creases — but at their price point they're among the better values I've tested. Score: 4.3/5.
What Are the Joydeco Blackout Curtains?
The Joydeco Blackout Curtains are microfiber panel curtains using a triple-weave construction — essentially three layers of polyester woven together so tightly that light can't punch through. They're marketed as an all-in-one solution for bedrooms: darkness for sleep, thermal insulation for energy savings, and noise reduction for light sleepers in noisy spaces.

You get two panels per order, each loaded with 8 silver grommets (1.6-inch inner diameter), so they pair with most standard and decorative rods without any extra hardware. The 84-inch length I tested covered my standard bedroom window with a couple of inches of overlap on each side, which is crucial for blocking light at the edges. The set comes in more than 20 colors and a wide range of sizes, so finding a fit for your space is less of a puzzle than with some competitors.
Key Features
- Triple-weave 100% polyester microfiber blocks 80%+ of sunlight in dark colors
- Built-in thermal insulation reduces heat transfer through the window
- Dense fabric absorbs approximately 35% of outside noise
- 8 silver grommets per panel, 1.6-inch inner diameter
- Machine washable in a mesh bag on gentle cycle
- Wrinkle-resistant formula; arrives thread-trimmed
- Available in 20+ sizes and 20+ colors
Hands-On Review
I unboxed the Joydeco blackout curtains on a Thursday afternoon and hung them that evening — the whole process took under fifteen minutes because the grommets were pre-punched and perfectly spaced. The fabric had a few shipping creases along the fold lines, which is standard for any curtains shipped folded, but they smoothed out significantly after I gently tugged them taut on the rod.

By day two I was testing the blackout claim in a south-facing bedroom. Here's where it got interesting. The direct midday sun turned a bright, sharp line across my floor into a soft, diffused glow — barely noticeable. I'm not exaggerating when I say I took a two-hour nap at 3 PM without reaching for an eye mask. That level of darkness surprised me because I've tested curtains at twice the price that let in more light.
What nobody mentions in the listings: the grommet areas create small light leaks at the very top of the window frame. On bright mornings, I noticed a thin line of light creeping down from each bracket. It's not enough to wake me, but if you need absolute pitch-black conditions for shift work or newborn-friendly naps, you'll want to add a valance or a second curtain layer at the top.

On thermal performance, I ran a simple comparison. With the Joydeco panels closed on a 92°F afternoon, my thermostat readout dropped about 4 degrees compared to the same window with only a thin sheer panel. The triple-weave fabric isn't as thick as dedicated thermal drapes with a foil backing, but it does add a meaningful buffer that reduces that brutal afternoon radiant heat.
Noise reduction is real but partial. I live on a moderately busy street and the curtains noticeably softened the mid-range rumble of traffic. Sharp sounds — a car horn, a dog bark — still came through clearly. If your main issue is low-frequency noise (traffic, HVAC, neighbours' bass), these help but won't replace acoustic panels.
Who Should Buy It?
These are a strong match if you sleep odd hours, work nights, or live somewhere with aggressive morning sunlight that punches through cheap blinds. The thermal insulation also makes them worthwhile if your heating and cooling bills are a concern and you want a one-product solution rather than blackout shades plus thermal liners.
They're also a practical pick for renters — no tools required beyond a rod, and you can take them when you move. The machine-washable microfiber handles regular cleaning without special trips to the dry cleaner.
Skip these if you need total, absolute darkness. Light colors block only about 60% of sunlight, and even dark colors let a sliver through the grommet area. If you're photosensitive or sleeping in a pitch-black environment is a medical necessity, look at dedicated blackout roller shades or cellular shades instead. Also skip if your windows are unusually wide — you'd need multiple panels to get a proper center overlap, and the cost adds up fast.
Alternatives Worth Considering
NICETOWN Blackout Curtains — NICETOWN offers a comparable triple-weave blackout curtain at a similar price point, with a wider variety of printed patterns. Choose NICETOWN if you want more design options beyond solid colors.
Deconovo Room Darkening Curtains — Deconovo's offering includes a light-filtering layer that some users report gives a softer, less completely dark feel. Go with Joydeco if maximum darkness is your priority.
Density Pro Blackout Curtains — Density Pro uses a similar microfiber triple-weave but adds a dedicated thermal foil backing layer. They're heavier and harder to wash, but if extreme thermal insulation is your main goal (cold winters, hot summers), the trade-off is worth it.
FAQ
In dark colors (black, navy, burgundy), yes — they block 80%+ of incoming light. I napped comfortably at 2 PM behind the 84-inch black panels. Light colors only manage ~60% blackout, so choose accordingly if you're sensitive to light.
Final Verdict
After two weeks with Joydeco blackout curtains framing my bedroom window, I'd buy them again — specifically the 84-inch black panels for a bedroom where I need real darkness. The triple-weave fabric does what it promises, the thermal benefit is a genuine bonus, and the grommet design makes them genuinely easy to live with. The light leak at the grommet line and the moderate noise reduction aren't dealbreakers for me, but they're worth knowing before you commit. At their price point, they outperform curtains I've tested that cost nearly double.