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Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam Reviews (2026)

Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam is a budget-friendly hybrid that pairs pocket springs with a softer foam top. In our testing, it felt easy to move on and quieter than many older-style spring beds. It works best for back and side sleepers, couples, and combination sleepers who want some bounce without an overly noisy surface, but the softer feel can be a drawback for strict stomach sleepers or anyone who wants a firmer, more locked-in midsection.

Product Overview

Mattress Overall Score Pros Cons Ideal For
Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam 4.0/5.0 Bouncy feel, quiet surface, solid motion control Medium-soft feel, lighter 6-inch build Back/side sleepers, couples, combination sleepers

Final Verdict

The Elevate combines a pocket-spring core with a softer foam top, so it feels lively when you turn but calmer than a traditional spring bed when a partner shifts. The main trade-off is support depth: the surface is comfortable, but the 6-inch version is not the best match for sleepers who want a firmer, flatter feel through the hips and lower back.

Who It’s For

Who It’s Not For

  • Strict stomach sleepers who want a firmer face-down surface

  • Heavier sleepers who prefer a denser, flatter feel

  • Anyone who dislikes bounce

Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam

How We Tested

We slept on the mattress using the same process outlined in How We Test Mattresses through normal routines—full nights, short naps, and time spent reading and working on a laptop—then compared notes across Support, Cooling, Pressure Relief, Motion Isolation, Responsiveness, Edge Support, and Durability. We repeated partner-movement drills and edge-sitting checks at different times of day. Our testing focused on how the feel settled after the initial break-in and how steady the surface stayed from one session to the next.

Our Testing Experience

Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam

Our Testing Experience

Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam

In our actual testing, the first thing we noticed was the lift when rolling from back to side. The surface never felt dead or sticky. Lying on my back after a long desk day, the top felt soft enough to ease pressure without swallowing my hips. Marcus Reed, who runs warm and dislikes a hammock feel, thought airflow was better than a dense all-foam bed but still wanted a touch more firmness under his hips. Jenna Brooks and Ethan Cole paid close attention to partner movement: Jenna could still tell when Ethan changed positions, but the motion stayed more contained than on a traditional innerspring. Dr. Adrian Walker’s view matched our notes: a medium-soft hybrid can work well when your alignment stays steady, but softness at the pelvis can become the limiting factor.

What we liked

  • Easy turning with a buoyant, hotel-like bounce

  • Less ripple than older spring beds when a partner moves

  • Comfortable surface for lounging and reading

Who it is best for

  • Back and side sleepers who want soft comfort with spring lift

  • Couples who want a quieter, less disruptive surface

  • Sleepers who dislike the stuck-in feel of dense memory foam

Where it falls short

  • The softer feel can under-support heavy stomach sleepers

  • Edge sitting compresses more than it does on firmer hybrids

  • The 6-inch build does not deliver the deep, dense support some sleepers want

Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam

Pros & Cons

Pros Cons
Bouncy, easy-to-move-on surface Medium-soft feel will not suit everyone
Pocket springs help airflow Edges compress more when sitting
Generally quiet and partner-friendly Not a firm, support-first feel

Details

Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam

Review Score

Metric Score Remarks
Support 4.1 The spring core keeps the body lifted, though the surface feel stays on the softer side.
Cooling 4.0 Airflow from the spring core helps, but the foam top still warms a bit over time.
Pressure Relief 4.0 The softer surface eases pressure at the shoulders and hips, especially on your side.
Motion Isolation 4.2 Partner movement stays reasonably contained for a spring-based mattress.
Responsiveness 4.3 Quick, bouncy transitions make position changes easy.
Edge Support 3.8 Sleeping near the edge feels fine, but sitting compresses the perimeter more than firmer hybrids do.
Durability 3.8 The warranty helps confidence, but the lighter, softer build still feels like a trade-off.
Overall 4.0 A good mix of comfort and bounce for the price.

Choosing Guide

Choose this mattress if you want a medium-soft hybrid feel, switch positions at night, or share a bed and want lower disturbance without losing bounce. If your body weight is higher, you mostly sleep on your stomach, or you want a firmer support-first feel, a sturdier hybrid will probably fit better.

If you want more support through the midsection and stronger perimeter stability, Helix Midnight, Saatva Classic, and Brooklyn Bedding Signature Hybrid are the kinds of alternatives we would look at first. They make more sense when firm support matters more than a softer, hotel-like surface.

Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam

Limitations

Wakefit Elevate Pocket Spring Mattress with Memory Foam

The Elevate leans soft, and that softness is the point—up to a point. If your hips tend to sink on plusher beds, your midsection may drift out of alignment, especially when you sleep on your stomach. The 6-inch profile also gives you less support depth than thicker hybrids, so heavier sleepers or anyone used to a denser build may want something more substantial.

Vs. Alternatives

Why choose this model

  • You want a medium-soft hybrid feel with easy turning

  • You like bounce but still want calmer partner disturbance

  • You prefer a quieter spring feel than a traditional innerspring

Alternatives to consider

  • Helix Midnight: a more balanced hybrid for mixed positions

  • Saatva Classic: a firmer, more traditional support feel with stronger edges

  • Brooklyn Bedding Signature Hybrid: a straightforward hybrid with more firmness flexibility

Pro Tips

  • Give it a short break-in period before judging firmness.

  • Pair it with a stable base so the surface stays even on a platform-style setup.

  • Rotate it head to toe from time to time to help wear stay even and support feel more consistent over time as covered in our durability guide.

  • Use a breathable mattress protector to keep the cover cleaner.

  • If you sleep hot, focus on breathable sheets and steady room airflow.

  • If your low back feels too relaxed, try a slightly lower-loft pillow.

  • For edge sitting, use the center more often if you tend to perch in one place.

  • If you are a side sleeper, a knee pillow can help when your hips feel tight.

  • For couples, test your normal in-and-out-of-bed routine before the trial window gets close.

FAQs

Does it feel more like foam or more like a spring mattress?

In our testing, it felt like a soft, cushioned top with noticeable spring lift underneath—more buoyant than an all-foam bed, but less jiggly than a traditional spring mattress.

Is it good for hot sleepers?

The spring core helps airflow, so it can work for hot sleepers, but the plush top can still warm up after a few hours.

How well does it isolate motion for couples?

Partner movement stays fairly localized for a spring-based design, so most position changes do not travel across the whole bed the way they can on a classic innerspring.

Is it supportive enough for back pain?

It can work for back sleepers who like a softer surface, but people shopping specifically for back pain support will usually do better on a firmer hybrid.

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Our Testing Team

Chris Miller

Lead Tester

Chris oversees the full testing pipeline for mattresses, sofas, and other home products. He coordinates the team, designs scoring frameworks, and lives with every product long enough to feel real strengths and weaknesses. His combination-sleeping and mixed lounging habits keep him focused on long-term comfort and support.

Marcus Reed

Heavyweight Sofa & Mattress Tester

Marcus brings a heavier build and heat-sensitive profile into every test. He pushes deep cushions, edges, and frames harder than most users. His feedback highlights whether a design holds up under load, runs hot, or collapses into a hammock-like slump during long gaming or streaming sessions.

Carlos Alvarez

Posture & Work-From-Home Specialist

Carlos spends long hours working from sofas and beds with a laptop. He tracks how mid-back, neck, and lumbar regions respond to different setups. His notes reveal whether a product keeps posture neutral during extended sitting or lying, and whether small adjustments still feel stable and controlled.

Mia Chen

Petite Side-Sleeper & Lounger

Mia tests how mattresses and sofas treat a smaller frame during side sleeping and curled-up lounging. She feels pressure and seat-depth problems very quickly. Her feedback exposes designs that swallow shorter users, leave feet dangling, or create sharp pressure points at shoulders, hips, and knees.

Jenna Brooks

Couple Comfort & Motion Tester

Jenna evaluates how well sofas and mattresses handle real shared use with a partner. She tracks motion transfer, usable width, and edge comfort when two adults spread out. Her comments highlight whether a product supports relaxed couple lounging, easy repositioning, and quiet nights without constant disturbance.

Jamal Davis

Tall, Active-Body Tester

Jamal brings a tall, athletic frame and post-workout soreness into the lab. He checks seat depth, leg support, and surface responsiveness on every product. His notes show whether cushions bounce back, frames feel solid under long legs, and sleep surfaces support joints during recovery stretches and naps.

Ethan Cole

Restless Lounger & Partner Tester

Ethan acts as the moving partner in many couple-focused tests. He shifts positions frequently and pays attention to how easily a surface lets him turn, slide, or return after short breaks. His feedback exposes cushions that feel too squishy, too sticky, or poorly shaped for real-world lounging patterns.