
Marriott Hotels & Resorts uses custom Sealy Posturepedic mattresses built by Tempur Sealy Hospitality - sold as a 12-inch foam or 13-inch innerspring model. Here's who actually makes each Marriott-family bed, what they cost in 2026, and whether you should buy one for home.
The Marriott has built its reputation on a single guest experience: getting into bed and not wanting to leave. That signature feel is no accident. Marriott commissions custom hotel mattresses from Tempur Sealy Hospitality - built on Sealy Posturepedic engineering and offered in two distinct configurations (a 12-inch gel-infused foam model and a 13-inch innerspring) for its North American properties. Sister brands inside the Marriott family use other premium makers (Simmons for Westin and St. Regis, Stearns & Foster for The Ritz-Carlton), so the answer to "what mattress does Marriott use" depends on which Marriott brand you book.
Below is the current 2026 picture - who builds them, what's inside, what they cost, and whether you should buy one for your own bedroom.
The short answer: Tempur Sealy Hospitality, the contract division of Tempur Sealy International, builds the standard Marriott Hotels & Resorts beds on the Sealy Posturepedic platform. Older Marriott loyalty pages still reference Simmons, and that's where the long-running "Marriott uses Simmons" claim comes from. It's now out of date for the flagship Marriott line.
For the wider Marriott portfolio, the supplier varies by brand:
If you want the bed you slept on, find the specific Marriott brand on the receipt - not just "Marriott."
Shop Marriott sells exactly two mattresses under the Marriott Hotels label. Both are exclusive to Marriott and unavailable through retail mattress stores.
A three-layer all-foam build using gel-infused memory foam over an Advanced Back Support core, finished with a water-resistant performance cover. Feel is medium-firm, with the gel layer pulling heat away from sleepers and the support core preventing the sinking feeling associated with cheaper memory foam. The fact that a major hotel chain offers an all-foam model at all is unusual - most hotels stick to hybrids - and it makes Marriott the easiest hotel bed for side sleepers who want deep contouring.
Quilted foam upper layers over a pocketed coil core. Bouncier than the foam model, cooler-sleeping on average, and a touch taller. Marriott pitches this one as their "signature" bed; it's the mattress most guests describe when they say a Marriott felt "luxurious but supportive." Medium-firm feel, same water-resistant cover, same 10-year warranty.
Both ship with the matching box spring sold separately, and both can be bundled with the Marriott bedding set if you want to recreate the full sleep experience.
Both the Marriott Foam Mattress and Marriott Innerspring Mattress are priced identically at every size on Shop Marriott:
Marriott Bonvoy members occasionally see 25-35% off around Black Friday, Memorial Day, and Labor Day - a queen at 35% off drops to roughly $1,296. Note that neither bed includes a home sleep trial, and Marriott does not accept returns or exchanges on mattresses.
The Marriott mattresses sold through europe.shopmarriott.com are not the same product. Both EU and UK versions are hybrid foam-over-spring builds - 25 cm tall in the EU, 30 cm in the UK - finished with a Jacquard woven polycotton ticking. The UK model swaps the foam top for high-density polyester. Warranty drops to 5 years (vs. 10 years in the US), and pricing for a UK double sits around £1,435.
If you stayed at a Marriott in Paris and want the same bed in Phoenix, the US Innerspring is the closest match - but it's not identical.
Three design choices do most of the work:
There's also a hygiene angle most reviews skip: the water-resistant performance cover means spills and sweat don't penetrate the foam layers, which is a real factor in why hotel mattresses stay feeling new for 7+ years of nightly heavy use.
A quick scan of the major luxury hotel mattress programs, by manufacturer and approximate queen MSRP:
Where Marriott wins: offers an all-foam option (rare among hotel programs), strong 10-year warranty, broad lineup of sister brands at different price points.
Where Marriott loses: no in-home trial, no returns, no firmness customization (vs. Four Seasons' adjustable system), shorter warranty in EU/UK markets.
Buy it if you:
Skip it if you:
Three beds replicate the Marriott feel with the safety net of a home trial:
Marriott Hotels & Resorts mattresses are built by Tempur Sealy Hospitality on the Sealy Posturepedic platform - a foam model and an innerspring model, both medium-firm, both priced around $1,995 for a queen, both backed by a 10-year warranty. The "Marriott uses Simmons" line you'll still see floating around the internet describes the Westin and St. Regis sister brands, not Marriott Hotels itself.
They're a strong buy if you specifically slept on one and want to replicate it. If you're shopping for a luxury hotel-style bed in general, retail alternatives with home trials are the lower-risk path.
Marriott Hotels & Resorts beds are built by Tempur Sealy Hospitality (the contract division of Tempur Sealy International) on the Sealy Posturepedic platform. Older marketing materials reference Simmons, but Simmons currently supplies sister brands Westin and St. Regis - not the flagship Marriott Hotels line.
On Shop Marriott, the Marriott Foam Mattress and Marriott Innerspring Mattress are priced identically: about $1,395 (Twin), $1,495 (Twin XL), $1,795 (Full), $1,995 (Queen), and $2,395 (King or California King). Bonvoy members occasionally see 25-35% off around Black Friday, Memorial Day, and Labor Day.
The Innerspring is bouncier, cooler-sleeping, and the closer match to what most US Marriott guests describe as the signature feel. The Foam is better for side sleepers who want deeper contouring and quieter motion isolation. Both are medium-firm and both carry the same 10-year warranty.
No. The Ritz-Carlton uses a custom pillow-top innerspring typically made by Stearns & Foster, and Westin's Heavenly Bed is a plush-top innerspring made by Simmons Beautyrest. If you specifically loved a Ritz-Carlton or Westin stay, buy that brand's mattress - not the standard Marriott Hotels model.
No. Shop Marriott does not offer an in-home sleep trial, and mattresses cannot be returned or exchanged once delivered. If a trial period matters, retail alternatives like the Saatva Classic (365-night trial) or Helix Midnight Luxe (100-night trial) replicate the medium-firm hotel feel with the safety net of returns.
No - the European and UK Marriott mattresses are hybrid foam-over-spring builds (25 cm tall in the EU, 30 cm in the UK), with a 5-year warranty rather than the 10-year US warranty. The closest US equivalent is the Marriott Innerspring, but the construction is not identical.
Banner Mattress carries retail alternatives engineered to the same medium-firm hotel spec - with proper sleep trials, longer warranties, and white-glove delivery.
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Banner Mattress EditorialThe Banner Mattress editorial team publishes independent mattress reviews, buying guides, and sleep-health advice. Since 2018 we've tested 1,000+ mattresses and 3,000+ pillows, sheets, and bedding accessories in our review lab - every recommendation is hands-on, never sourced from vendor talking points. Affiliate links may earn us a commission, but never change what we recommend.
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