
Lucid is a Malouf Companies (formerly CVB Inc.) brand headquartered in Logan, Utah, with manufacturing split between the U.S. and overseas - here is the current sourcing picture, why it shifted, and what it means for price, warranty, and fiberglass.
If you're shopping for an affordable foam bed, "where are Lucid mattresses made" is one of the first questions Google surfaces - and the answer has shifted over the last two years. Lucid is the affordable mattress line owned by Malouf Companies (formerly known as CVB Inc.), an American sleep brand headquartered in Logan, Utah. The company designs every Lucid bed in Utah, but the actual manufacturing happens at a mix of locations that has changed as Malouf has expanded.
This guide pulls together the current sourcing picture, what's changed since older write-ups, and the practical buying questions ("is there fiberglass?", "what's the warranty?", "is it any good?") that the SERP shows shoppers ask in the same session.
Lucid is a house brand of Malouf Companies, the Utah-based sleep manufacturer that also owns Linenspa and the Malouf accessories line. Malouf was incorporated in 2003 as CVB Inc. and rebranded in 2023 - older reviews still refer to "CVB Inc." or call Lucid a "CVB brand." It's the same parent company.
Sleep Foundation's 2025 review describes Malouf as a Utah-based parent that imports its Lucid mattresses for U.S. distribution, while its 2026 sister review on the SureCool line lists "Made in the USA" on the box. In other words, Lucid is one brand with a manufacturing footprint that spans multiple countries.
The short answer: it depends on the model and the year you bought it.
So if you're looking at a brand-new SureCool bed from a big-box retailer in 2026, you're most likely getting a U.S.-assembled mattress. If you're buying a discounted older Lucid memory foam on Amazon, the box still ships from offshore production.
Two reasons shoppers ask "where are Lucid mattresses made" before checking out:
Malouf segments Lucid into three families. All use CertiPUR-US certified foams.
Gel memory foam. The original Lucid lineup, available in 5", 6", 8", 10", 12" and 14" profiles with soft to firm options. The 12-inch medium gel memory foam is the most-reviewed configuration (the one Sleep Foundation and Naplab benchmarked). Gel infusion plus bamboo-charcoal aim to pull heat off the sleeper.
Latex hybrid. Sold in 10-inch firm and 12-inch medium-firm configurations. Layers a latex comfort layer over gel memory foam and a poly support core - a better match for side-back combo sleepers who want some bounce.
Hybrid (charcoal + aloe). Malouf's newer Lucid hybrid line adds pocketed coils with charcoal-infused foam and aloe vera top layers. This is the firmest-feeling Lucid construction and the closest the brand gets to a traditional spring mattress feel.
The Lucid Comfort Collection (SureCool, Bliss, Refresh) is a separate retailer-channel line - same brand, sold through Home Depot/Lowe's/Bed Bath, and the SKUs most likely to carry "Made in the USA" labeling.
Reviewers consistently give Lucid average-to-good marks for value and below-average marks for durability. The buying case looks roughly like this:
Where Lucid wins. Price (typically $269-$605 queen), motion isolation on the all-foam models (gel memory foam absorbs partner movement well), CertiPUR-US certification on every foam component, and a 10-year limited warranty with 100-night sleep trial (US purchases only) for direct buys.
Where it falls short. Edge support is weak on the foam models - expected at the price point. Sleep Foundation's lab gave the 12-inch gel memory foam mid-pack scores for durability, and the warranty excludes impressions under 1.5 inches plus any cover damage from unzipping (relevant because of the fiberglass barrier).
For shoppers spending under $500 on a queen, the value math holds. For shoppers who can stretch to $800+, more durable foam beds from brands like Nectar or Zinus's higher tiers tend to win head-to-head durability tests.
Lucid is a house brand of Malouf Companies, the Utah-based sleep manufacturer formerly known as CVB Inc. Malouf is headquartered in Logan, Utah and also owns the Linenspa and Malouf accessory lines.
It depends on the model. The original Lucid memory foam line is imported (Mattress-Reviews.com tested a unit with a foam core made in Spain and cover assembled in China). Newer Lucid Comfort Collection SKUs sold through Bed Bath & Beyond, Home Depot and Lowe's - like the SureCool gel memory foam - are labeled Made in the USA.
Yes. Lucid's memory foam line uses a fiberglass-blend fire barrier inside the cover, which is common across budget foam beds. Never unzip the cover - doing so releases fiberglass and voids the warranty. Lucid has not faced a fiberglass class-action lawsuit to date.
Lucid direct purchases come with a 10-year limited warranty and a 100-night sleep trial (U.S. orders only). The warranty excludes impressions under 1.5 inches and any cover damage. Trial terms vary at third-party retailers like Amazon and Walmart, so check the listing.
For the price (roughly $269-$605 queen), Lucid earns average-to-good reviews. Sleep Foundation, Mattress-Reviews.com, and Naplab all credit motion isolation, CertiPUR-US certified foam, and value. Durability and edge support are weaker - typical for budget all-foam beds.
Banner Mattress carries premium and mid-tier brands tested in our review lab - visit a showroom or browse our editorial picks.
Written by
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.
Mattress GuidesPuffy Cloud and Leesa Original are close on paper. Here is how their feel, construction, cooling, and pricing differ, and which one fits how you sleep.
Mattress GuidesWinkBed vs Purple, compared on feel, support, cooling, and price. One is a springy innerspring hybrid with firmness choices; the other is a weightless GelFlex grid. Here's which fits your sleep style.
Mattress GuidesNolah runs cooler and costs less; Puffy gives the deeper memory foam cradle. Here is how the two all-foam beds compare on feel, heat, and price.
