Sleep & Home Buyer's Guides

Mattresses and bedroom gear for better rest

1 category · 45 buying guides

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About Sleep & Home

Finding the right mattress is one of the most important decisions you'll make for your sleep quality and overall health. A good mattress can last 7-10 years, so choosing one that matches your sleep style, body type, and budget matters far more than brand recognition or marketing claims.

We've organized our mattress buyer's guides by specific needs and preferences—whether you're looking for pressure relief, cooling technology, affordability, or support for back pain. Each guide analyzes dozens of options based on aggregated customer reviews, specifications, and real-world performance data to help you understand what you're actually paying for.

Start by identifying your primary concern: budget constraints, sleeping position, temperature sensitivity, or specific health needs like spinal support. From there, our category guides dive deeper into the options that solve for each situation.

What to know before you buy

  • Firmness preference varies by body weight and sleeping position. Side sleepers typically need softer mattresses (4-6 firmness), back sleepers prefer medium (5-7), and stomach sleepers need firmer support (7-9).
  • Memory foam, latex, and hybrid mattresses have different heat retention properties. Memory foam sleeps warmest, latex and hybrids sleep cooler, and innerspring mattresses offer the most airflow.
  • Trial periods are standard but vary by brand—30 to 100 nights is typical. Check return policies and shipping costs before buying, especially for online-only brands.
  • Mattress durability depends on material quality and foam density. Higher density foam (5+ lbs/cubic foot) generally lasts longer than lower density, reducing sagging over time.
  • Edge support matters if you sleep near the mattress edge or have difficulty getting in and out of bed. Hybrid and innerspring models typically offer better edge support than all-foam options.
  • Warranty length often reflects manufacturer confidence in durability. Most cover 10 years, but some offer longer; longer warranties usually indicate better quality materials.