Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you buy through them, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Our editor has slept on the Nectar nightly for more than two years. The other four picks are researched against 200+ verified-purchase Amazon reviews per model and the Sleep Foundation 2024 memory foam testing data. We will not recommend a mattress we wouldn’t buy with our own money.
TL;DR: The Nectar Memory Foam ($799 on sale) is the best overall memory foam mattress under $1,000, and the one our editor has actually owned for two years. The Casper Original ($895) is the runner-up for couples who want zoned support and the lowest motion transfer in the segment. For buyers under $400, the Zinus Green Tea 12-inch is the safest budget choice on Amazon.
How we chose
We started with the long list of memory foam mattresses that ship at or below $1,000 in a Queen on a typical sale week, and narrowed by four things that matter past month three: build quality and foam density (which determines whether the mattress holds up at year two), trial length (anything under 100 nights is too short to test through a full season), warranty terms (most of the cheap mattresses on Amazon have warranties that exclude the failure modes that actually happen), and what real owners report after the honeymoon period ends.
Our editor has slept on the Nectar nightly for two years and counting, at 6 ft 2 and 230 pounds, which is the bracket where foam fatigue tends to show up first. For the four picks he has not personally lived with, we leaned on Sleep Foundation’s 2024 memory foam testing data, more than 200 verified-purchase Amazon reviews per model, the consensus across r/Mattress threads from the last twelve months, and a value-per-feature analysis that weighs price against trial length, warranty, certification, and sleeper-type fit.
Quick comparison
- Nectar Memory Foam (Best Overall) $799 Queen on sale, 365-night trial, lifetime warranty, 12-inch profile, strong pressure relief for side and back sleepers.
- Casper Original (Best for Couples) $895 Queen on sale, zoned foam keeps combination sleepers aligned, excellent motion isolation.
- Zinus Green Tea 12-Inch (Best Under $400) ~$330 Queen, CertiPUR-US foam, 100-night trial, the safest budget pick on Amazon with eight years of consistent owner reports.
- LUCID 10-Inch Gel Memory Foam (Best for Hot Sleepers) ~$425 Queen, gel-infused for actual heat dissipation, 10-year warranty.
- Linenspa 8-Inch Memory Foam Hybrid (Best for Guest Rooms) ~$295 Queen, foam over coils for surprisingly cool sleep at a guest-room price, ten-year warranty.
1. Nectar Memory Foam, Best Overall
Best for: side and back sleepers upgrading from a worn-out or budget mattress, on a sub-$1,000 budget, who want the safety net of a year-long trial.
This is the one mattress on this list our editor has actually owned, and it’s the one we point most readers to first. He bought it more than two years ago to replace a $150 spring mattress that was making a pulmonary embolism recovery harder than it needed to be. The morning neck and back stiffness eased within the first week. Two years in, at 6 ft 2 and 230 pounds, the mattress shows no body impressions, no edge breakdown, and no sag in the middle. That’s the heavier-sleeper bracket where foam fatigue typically shows up first. Mine hasn’t.
The build is 12 inches of multi-layer construction: a quilted cooling cover, a gel memory foam comfort layer, an adaptive Hi-Core memory foam support layer, a transition layer, and a high-density base. Foams are CertiPUR-US certified, which is third-party testing for restricted chemicals, not just a marketing badge. The feel is medium-firm with a gentle contour rather than a deep sink, and the foam responds quickly when you shift position, so it doesn’t lock you in place the way older soft-foam mattresses did.
Side sleeping is where the Nectar earns its rating. Back sleeping works well, the lumbar curve gets light contouring rather than pressing flat into a rigid surface. Stomach sleepers should look elsewhere. The hips sink enough that the lower back arches into a position you don’t want to hold all night.
One honest split with most online reviews: the Nectar is widely flagged for sleeping hot, and our editor (who keeps his bedroom at 67°F year-round) has never had that experience in two years. Foam does trap body heat (that’s physics, not a Nectar-specific problem), and owners who keep their bedrooms above 72°F do report the foam feels warm. The cool-bedroom version of this mattress is the one we love. Your bedroom temperature is what decides whether the heat issue lands on you the way it lands on the owners who complain about it.
The 365-night trial is the closer. You can sleep on it through a full year (a hot July, a cold January, a few weeks of bad sleep that has nothing to do with the mattress) and return it for a refund if it doesn’t work for your body. The lifetime warranty covers sagging deeper than 1.5 inches, manufacturing defects, and cover failures. Read the fine print before you buy, but it’s one of the more honest warranties in the category.
- Pros: Best-in-class trial period (365 nights) and lifetime warranty; CertiPUR-US foams; 12-inch profile holds up at heavier weights; meaningful pressure relief for side and back sleepers.
- Cons: Can sleep warm if your bedroom runs above 72°F; softer edges than a hybrid; not the right pick for stomach sleepers.
Price: $799 (Queen, on sale; $1,199 MSRP). Check current Nectar price on Amazon → Read our full Nectar review →
2. Casper Original, Best for Couples
Best for: couples with different sleep positions and schedules who want low motion transfer and balanced support.
The Casper Original more or less invented the bed-in-a-box category, and the current build is a competent zoned-foam mattress at $895 on sale. What makes it the couples pick is the zoning. The foam is firmer under the hips and softer under the shoulders, which keeps a side sleeper aligned and a back sleeper from sinking out of position when they roll over. For couples where one sleeps on a side and the other on their back, that zoning does work the Nectar’s even-density build doesn’t.
Motion isolation is the other reason it earns the couples slot. All-foam construction absorbs movement well, and Casper’s is no exception. A partner getting in or out of bed registers as a faint shift rather than a lurch. Edge support is better than the Nectar but still soft compared to a hybrid. If both of you tend to sleep right up against the edge, the Casper holds up well enough; if one of you sits on the side to put on shoes every morning, the edges will feel softer than you expect.
The honest tradeoff is value relative to the field. The trial is 100 nights (Nectar gives you 365), the warranty is 10 years (Nectar’s is lifetime), and durability reports past year four are mixed for heavier sleepers. If you and a partner both weigh under 200 pounds and you sleep in different positions, this is a strong pick. If you’re closer to 230, the Nectar’s lifetime warranty and 12-inch build are the safer bet.
- Pros: Zoned foam keeps combination sleepers aligned; excellent motion isolation for couples; balanced medium feel that works for most sleeper types.
- Cons: 100-night trial and 10-year warranty are short for the price; durability past year four is a meaningful concern for sleepers over 200 pounds.
Price: $895 (Queen, on sale). Check current Casper Original price on Amazon → Read our full Casper Original review →
3. Zinus Green Tea 12-Inch Memory Foam, Best Under $400
Best for: first apartments, kids’ rooms, and budget buyers who need a real mattress for under $400 and want eight years of owner data behind the pick.
The Zinus Green Tea 12-Inch is the budget memory foam mattress with the deepest owner-reporting history on Amazon. The product has been on the platform for years, with tens of thousands of verified-purchase reviews accumulated across multiple generations of buyers, which means the failure modes are documented and predictable rather than guessed at. At roughly $330 in a Queen, it’s the safest mattress we’d point a sub-$400 buyer to.
The build is straightforward: a memory foam comfort layer infused with green tea extract and activated charcoal (Zinus’s marketing pitch is odor control, the practical effect is the foam smells less aggressively chemical out of the box than most cheap memory foam), a pressure-relief comfort foam middle, and a high-density support base. CertiPUR-US certified. The feel is medium with a slight contour, not the deep sink of older memory foam, and the 12-inch profile is unusual at this price point.
The honest limits show up around year three. The foam densities are lower than what you get in the Nectar, and owner reports note compression and softening starting around year two-and-a-half for heavier sleepers (over 200 pounds). For solo sleepers under 180 pounds, the consensus across r/Mattress threads is that the Zinus holds up reasonably to year four, then needs replacing. At a third the price of the Nectar, that’s a fair trade for many buyers. Trial period is 100 nights, warranty is 10 years (manufacturing defects only, sagging coverage is narrow).
- Pros: Genuinely affordable; tens of thousands of verified-purchase Amazon reviews give you predictable expectations; the green-tea-infused foam off-gasses less than most budget memory foam; CertiPUR-US.
- Cons: Lower foam densities mean shorter useful life for sleepers over 200 pounds; warranty coverage on sagging is narrow; not the right pick for couples sharing a Queen long-term.
Price: ~$330 (Queen). See current Zinus Green Tea pricing on Amazon →
4. LUCID 10-Inch Gel Memory Foam, Best for Hot Sleepers
Best for: solo sleepers who run hot and want gel-infused memory foam at a sub-$500 price, without stepping up to a full hybrid.
The LUCID 10-Inch Gel Memory Foam is the budget pick for buyers whose biggest mattress complaint is heat. The top layer is bead-gel-infused memory foam, which moves heat away from the body more effectively than standard memory foam. Underneath, an aerated dual-air-flow comfort layer and a high-density support foam round out a 10-inch build. CertiPUR-US certified.
Gel infusion isn’t a complete fix for foam heat retention (no top-layer technology is, the underlying foam still traps some body heat), but the consensus across owner reviews and the Sleep Foundation 2024 memory foam comparative testing is that the LUCID sleeps measurably cooler than the Nectar, the Casper, or the Zinus. If your single biggest mattress complaint is waking up sweating, this is the budget pick that actually does something about it.
The catch is the trial. LUCID’s 30-night sleep trial is short. You get four weeks to decide, which is barely enough time to get through the break-in period (foam mattresses change feel for the first 10 to 14 days as the layers settle). The 10-year warranty is standard for the price. Edge support is soft, and the mattress isn’t the right pick for couples sharing a Queen who both weigh over 200 pounds. For a solo hot sleeper under that weight, it’s the strongest cooling memory foam pick under $500 on Amazon.
- Pros: Actual gel infusion in the comfort layer (not just marketing); measurably cooler than non-gel memory foam in third-party testing; CertiPUR-US.
- Cons: 30-night trial is half what the next-cheapest competitor offers; soft edges; not the right build for couples sharing a Queen at higher weights.
Price: ~$425 (Queen). See current LUCID pricing on Amazon →
5. Linenspa 8-Inch Memory Foam Hybrid, Best for Guest Rooms
Best for: guest rooms, kids’ beds, RV mattresses, and any scenario where the mattress is used a few nights a month rather than every night.
The Linenspa 8-Inch Memory Foam Hybrid is the guest-room pick. At roughly $295 in a Queen, it’s the cheapest mattress on this list. What makes it interesting is the construction: a memory foam comfort layer over a layer of pocketed steel coils. That’s a hybrid build at a price most all-foam budget mattresses sit at, and the coils give it the airflow and edge feel that a pure foam mattress at this price can’t match.
The honest framing: this isn’t a primary-bed mattress for an adult sleeping on it 300 nights a year. The foam densities are low, the coils are thinner gauge than what you get in a real hybrid, and the eight-inch total profile is shorter than most adults will want for long stretches. Owner reports past 18 months for daily-use sleepers note compression and edge softening. For the use cases it’s actually built for (a guest bed used 30 to 50 nights a year, a kid’s room, a starter bed for a teenager, an RV) it holds up fine and outperforms its price by a meaningful margin.
The 100-night trial and 10-year warranty are surprising at this price band. The warranty is narrow (sagging coverage is limited to defects, not normal wear), but for a guest bed, that’s enough. The shipping experience is good, the box is heavy but manageable, and the mattress expands fully within 48 hours.
- Pros: Genuinely affordable; hybrid construction at a guest-room price; coils give it cooler sleep than a pure foam pick at this tier; 100-night trial is good for the price.
- Cons: Lower foam densities and thinner coils limit daily-use lifespan; 8-inch profile is shorter than most adults will want; warranty sagging coverage is narrow.
Price: ~$295 (Queen). See current Linenspa 8-inch pricing on Amazon →
What to look for in a sub-$1,000 memory foam mattress
Foam density. Memory foam quality is largely a density question. The Nectar’s comfort layer sits around 3.5 lb/cu ft, the Casper’s around 3.0 lb/cu ft, the Zinus around 2.5 lb/cu ft, and budget picks like Linenspa around 2.0 lb/cu ft. Higher density means longer useful life and more consistent contour over time. Density also tracks roughly with price, which is why a $300 mattress lasts three to four years on a primary bed while a $799 mattress holds up at seven-plus.
Profile (thickness). Anything under 10 inches is short for an adult sleeper using the bed every night. Compression eventually reaches the support layer, and a thinner mattress gets there faster. Ten inches is the floor for daily use, 12 inches is the comfortable target for heavier sleepers or anyone who wants the mattress to last a decade.
CertiPUR-US certification. This is the meaningful certification for memory foam. It’s third-party testing for restricted chemicals (formaldehyde, certain phthalates), heavy metals, and ozone depleters. Every mattress on this list carries it. Avoid memory foam mattresses that don’t.
Trial period. A mattress should sleep right through a full seasonal cycle, which means anything under 100 nights is too short. The 100-night standard (Casper, Zinus, Linenspa) gets you through one season. Nectar’s 365-night trial gets you through all four, which matters more if you sleep hot or live somewhere with big seasonal temperature swings. LUCID’s 30-night trial is the outlier we’d flag as a meaningful downside on an otherwise solid mattress.
Warranty fine print. Lifetime warranties (Nectar) cover sagging deeper than 1.5 inches, manufacturing defects, and cover failures. Ten-year warranties (Casper, Zinus, LUCID, Linenspa) are the category standard. Read the actual terms: most warranties are non-transferable, require proof of purchase, and exclude damage from improper foundation support (cheap slatted frames are the most common warranty-voiding setup).
Heat retention. All memory foam traps some body heat (that’s physics, not a brand-specific defect). Gel infusion helps but isn’t a complete fix. If you sleep hot, the LUCID is the cooling pick on this list; a hybrid with coils (anything from the under-$1,500 tier up) will sleep cooler still. The cheapest fix that doesn’t require changing mattresses is keeping the bedroom under 70°F and using percale cotton sheets over sateen or jersey.
Final verdict
For most readers under $1,000, the Nectar Memory Foam is the pick we point to first and the one our editor has slept on for two years. The 365-night trial and lifetime warranty alone make it the lowest-risk decision in the category, and the build holds up at heavier weights in a way the cheaper picks don’t. If you sleep with a partner who has a different position or schedule, the Casper Original earns its couples slot. If your budget tops out under $400, the Zinus Green Tea is the safest bet on Amazon, with the deepest owner-reporting history. Hot sleepers should look hard at the LUCID for its gel infusion. And the Linenspa 8-inch is the guest-room pick that punches above its price.
For more sleep reviews and buying guides, browse our Sleep pillar or read our deeper renter’s guide to choosing a mattress.
Last updated: May 2026. Pricing and trial terms can change. Verify current details on the retailer’s site before you buy.
Two of our picks go head to head in the Nectar vs Casper comparison.
What to consider
Foam density tracks with longevity: 3.5 lb/cu ft (Nectar) lasts about seven years, 2.0 lb/cu ft (Linenspa) lasts about three on a daily-use bed. Profile under 10 inches is too thin for adults using the bed every night. CertiPUR-US is the only meaningful chemical certification. Trial periods under 100 nights are too short to test through a full season. Warranties usually require an approved foundation; cheap slatted frames are the most common warranty-voiding setup.