If you’ve got the budget, Saatva mattresses are worth their cost for most sleepers. That being said, the value of any mattress will depend largely on how much you value each performance factor.

When scoring mattresses at NapLab, we’re looking at the following performance categories:
- Cooling
- Motion Transfer
- Response Time
- Edge Support
- Sex
- Pressure Relief
- Off-Gassing
- Company
Each of these categories is given a numerical score, based on a mix of objective and subjective data.
To decide if Saatva is worth it, you’ll need to decide which of these 8 categories is most critical to you.

Use the table below for detailed scoring on each Saatva mattress.
Factor | Saatva Classic | Saatva Memory Foam Hybrid |
---|---|---|
Cooling | 10 | 10 |
Motion Transfer | 9.6 | 7.7 |
Response | 8.7 | 9.0 |
Edge Support | 10 | 9.7 |
Sex | 9.9 | 9.7 |
Pressure Relief | 10 | 9.0 |
Off-Gassing | 10 | 10 |
Company | 9.4 | 9.4 |
The Saatva Classic excels in basically every performance-scoring category we test for. The Saatva Classic is basically the only coil-on-coil mattress we have tested so the price is right on par with the NapLab average.
The Saatva Memory Foam Hybrid is also a top-scoring mattress, with the one exception being motion transfer, where it charted higher levels of motion transfer than we typically like to see.
Concerning cost, the Memory Foam Hybrid is $1470 for a queen mattress, $110 more than the average cost of a queen-sized memory foam hybrid.
