The Lull Luxe Hybrid Mattress is a medium-firm hybrid that pairs memory foam with pocketed coils. In our hands-on testing, it stood out for pressure relief, motion control, and edge support, which makes it a strong match for couples and mixed-position sleepers. The main trade-off is surface feel: it contours more than a springier hybrid, and shoppers who sleep very hot or want a deep, plush cradle may want something airier or softer.
Table of Contents
Product Overview
| Mattress | Overall Score | Pros | Cons | Ideal For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lull Luxe Hybrid Mattress | 4.3/5 | Strong motion isolation; balanced medium-firm support; steady edge support | Can sleep warmer than more airflow-heavy hybrids; not ultra-plush | Couples; back sleepers; combination sleepers; side sleepers who want contouring with support |
Final Verdict
In our testing, the Lull Luxe Hybrid felt steady and easy to trust. It cushioned the shoulders and hips, then the coil support kept the midsection from sinking too far. Motion stayed controlled when one sleeper changed position, and the perimeter felt secure enough for both sitting and sleeping near the edge. The trade-off is that the foam comfort layer still holds a bit more warmth than a breezier build, and the top does not have the deep sink of a plush pillow-top.
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Who It’s For
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Couples who want a quieter surface when one person moves
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Back sleepers who need steadier hip support
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Combination sleepers who move between back and side positions
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Side sleepers who want contouring without losing support
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Who It’s Not For
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People who sleep very hot and want maximum surface airflow
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Lightweight side sleepers who prefer a very plush mattress
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Anyone who dislikes a memory-foam feel altogether
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How We Tested It

We used the mattress as part of our mattress testing process for sleeping, reading, and working in bed, then compared notes across Support, Cooling, Pressure Relief, Motion Isolation, Responsiveness, Edge Support, and Durability. Our testing included shared-bed movement checks, edge-sitting and edge-sleeping observations, overnight heat buildup, and repeated position changes to see how quickly the surface recovered. We also looked closely at the construction and how well the mattress held its shape through repeated use.
Our Testing Experience
The first thing we noticed was the balance. The top had enough contour to let the shoulder settle in, but it did not let the hips keep dropping when we rolled from side sleeping to back sleeping. That gave the bed a more stable feel than many softer foam-heavy hybrids, and the coil layer added just enough lift to keep position changes from feeling sluggish.
Marcus paid closest attention to heat and support and liked that his midsection stayed level, though he still noticed more warmth than he usually gets from a breezier latex-forward bed. Jenna and Ethan focused on partner disturbance. Ethan’s turns carried less ripple across the surface than we expected, and the edge stayed stable when they drifted outward overnight.
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What we liked
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Balanced medium-firm support that kept hips from sinking too far
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Quiet, controlled motion feel during shared-bed movement
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Steady perimeter support for sitting and edge sleeping
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Who it is best for
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Couples with mismatched schedules or restless turning
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Back and combination sleepers who need steadier lumbar and hip alignment
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People who want memory-foam contouring with coil support underneath
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Where it falls short
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Hot sleepers who want a crisp, fast-cooling surface feel
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Shoppers chasing a very plush, pillow-top-like sink
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Those who prefer instant bounce over a slower foam cradle
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Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Medium-firm feel stays supportive under the hips | Foam comfort can feel a bit warm for heat-sensitive sleepers |
| Strong motion isolation for shared-bed use | Not a true plush surface |
| Reinforced edges feel stable when sitting and sleeping near the perimeter | Some sleepers may want a faster, springier top response |
| Coils add lift and keep the mattress from feeling overly sinky | Heavier sizes are awkward to rotate alone |
| Works well for mixed sleep positions | The memory-foam feel will not suit everyone |
Details
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Price at the time of our verification: Twin $1,199; Twin XL $1,299; Full $1,399; Queen $1,499; King $1,699; Cal King $1,699
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Firmness: medium-firm
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Height: 13"
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Type: hybrid (memory foam + pocketed coils)
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Construction highlights: quilted memory-foam cover; 2" cooling gel-infused memory foam; 1" sink-resistant transition foam; 8" foam-encased pocket coils; 1" durable base foam; tufted stretch-knit cover with reinforced handles
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Edge support: foam-encased coil system with reinforced perimeter support
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Sizes and dimensions: Twin 38"×75"×13"; Twin XL 38"×80"×13"; Full 54"×75"×13"; Queen 60"×80"×13"; King 76"×80"×13"; Cal King 72"×84"×13"
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Shipping weights: Twin 61 lbs; Twin XL 65 lbs; Full 84 lbs; Queen 101 lbs; King 129 lbs; Cal King 126 lbs
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Shipping and returns: ships in 1–2 business days; free shipping and returns in the contiguous U.S.; Alaska and Hawaii available for a fee
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Trial: 365 nights
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Foam certification: CertiPUR-US certified foams
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Manufacturing note: crafted and assembled in the USA with domestic and imported materials

Review Score
| Metric | Score | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Support | 4.3/5 | Kept hips from drifting down, especially in back and combination positions. |
| Cooling | 4.0/5 | The gel-infused foams helped, but the surface still leaned a little warm for very hot sleepers. |
| Pressure Relief | 4.4/5 | Shoulder and hip contouring felt consistent without turning the top into deep quicksand. |
| Motion Isolation | 4.6/5 | Partner movement stayed muted in shared-bed testing. |
| Responsiveness | 4.1/5 | The coils add lift, but the comfort foam is still slower than latex or a springier hybrid. |
| Edge Support | 4.3/5 | The perimeter felt stable for sitting and for sleeping near the outer edge. |
| Durability | 4.4/5 | The hybrid build and warranty point to a solid long-term outlook. |
| Overall | 4.3/5 | A well-rounded medium-firm hybrid with standout motion control and dependable support. |
Choosing Guide
If you want a medium-firm mattress that blends contouring with more lift than a full-foam bed, this model makes the most sense for combination sleepers, couples, and back sleepers who do not want deep sink. It also works for side sleepers who want pressure relief without giving up support. If you tend to sleep hot, though, treat the foam comfort as the main trade-off and compare it with more airflow-focused hybrids before buying.
For comparison picks:
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Lightweight side sleepers who want plusher pressure relief: Helix Midnight.
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Very hot sleepers who want a stronger cooling push: Brooklyn Bedding Aurora Luxe.
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People who want a more buoyant, traditional innerspring feel: Saatva Classic.

Limitations

The main compromise is feel. The top still behaves like memory foam, so very hot sleepers or anyone who wants a crisp, cool-to-the-touch surface may want something with a stronger cooling focus. It also is not especially plush, so lightweight side sleepers who like deeper sink may want more give at the surface. And because the mattress gets heavy in queen and larger sizes, rotating it is easier with two people.
Vs. Alternatives
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Why choose this model
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Strong motion isolation for couples and restless sleepers
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Balanced medium-firm support that resists hammocking
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Stable edge support for sitting and full-surface sleeping
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Alternatives to consider
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Helix Midnight for lighter side sleepers who want more cushion.
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Brooklyn Bedding Aurora Luxe for shoppers who put cooling first.
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Saatva Classic for a springier, more traditional feel.
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Pro Tips
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Give it a short break-in period before judging pressure relief and temperature.
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If you run warm, use breathable sheets and skip thick foam toppers.
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Rotate the mattress on a schedule to help wear stay more even.
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Pair it with a stable foundation so the support feels consistent.
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If you share the bed, test partner movement during your normal routine, not just while lying still.
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If lower-back support matters most, spend a few minutes on your back first and see whether your hips stay level.
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Keep the bedroom temperature steady during the first week so you can separate foam warmth from room heat.
FAQs
Is the Lull Luxe Hybrid Mattress actually medium-firm?
Yes. In our testing, it read as a balanced medium-firm: enough contouring to cushion the joints, with a clear supportive stop under the hips.
How does it do for couples and motion transfer?
It performed well. Motion transfer stayed muted enough that the surface felt calmer than many hybrids in the same general lane.
Will hot sleepers like it?
Some will, but not all. The build uses cooling gel-infused foam and coils for airflow, yet the surface still carries some of the warmth you can get from memory-foam comfort layers.
What’s the trial and warranty coverage?
At the time of our verification, Lull lists the Luxe Hybrid with a 365-night trial and a lifetime warranty when purchased through the brand site.