The PlushBeds Botanical Bliss is the bed you buy when you’ve read enough mattress chemistry to be paranoid about it. GOLS-certified organic latex, organic cotton cover, organic New Zealand wool, fabric-encased construction with no glues. The certifications stack longer than any other mattress at the price point. The trade-off is that latex feels like latex, which not everyone wants.
Quick verdict
8.7 / 10
The cleanest construction in the under-$1,800 organic mattress category. A real GOLS / GOTS / GREENGUARD Gold / Eco-INSTITUT bed, customizable firmness, 25-year warranty. Latex bounce is responsive but isn’t memory-foam contour. Edge support is a known soft spot.
What we liked
- GOLS, GOTS, GREENGUARD Gold, Eco-INSTITUT certified
- Customizable firmness post-purchase (rearrange layers)
- 25-year warranty (longest in the organic category)
- Permanent $1,500-off promotion on Queen ($1,449)
Where it falls short
- Latex transmits motion, couples notice
- Edge support sinks under weight, weak perimeter
- Medium feels firmer than expected for sub-130 lb side sleepers
- 100-night trial; return ships at customer cost
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Type | 100% organic latex (Talalay + Dunlop blend) |
| Heights available | 9″, 10″, 12″ |
| Firmness options | Medium (6/10), Firm (7/10), customizable post-purchase |
| Comfort layer | 2-3″ Talalay latex |
| Support core | 6″ Dunlop latex |
| Cover | Organic cotton + organic New Zealand wool |
| Certifications | GOLS, GOTS, GREENGUARD Gold, Eco-INSTITUT, OEKO-TEX |
| Trial | 100 nights |
| Warranty | 25 years |
| Return shipping | Customer pays OR $149 pickup fee |
| Queen price | $1,449 (permanent $1,500-off, MSRP $2,949) |
What organic actually means in a mattress
Most mattresses sold as “natural” or “eco” are nothing of the sort. The certification you want to see is GOLS for latex and GOTS for cotton and wool. GOLS, the Global Organic Latex Standard, certifies that the latex was harvested from organically grown rubber trees and processed without prohibited chemicals. GOTS does the same for textile components. GREENGUARD Gold certifies low VOC emissions. Eco-INSTITUT certifies low chemical residue.
The Botanical Bliss carries all four. We verified the certifications independently against the GOLS and GOTS public registries. This is a real organic mattress, not a marketing claim.
Practical implication
If you’re chemically sensitive, pregnant, or just want to minimize household chemistry, this is the cleanest bed in the under-$2,000 category. The Avocado Green Mattress is comparable. The Birch by Helix is close. Most other “natural” mattresses fall short on at least one certification.
What latex actually feels like
If you’ve never slept on latex, here’s the honest description: it’s responsive, slightly bouncy, and has zero of the “hugging” feel you get from memory foam. It pushes back. The Talalay top layer is gentler. The Dunlop core is firmer and more supportive.
Side sleepers who like contouring won’t love it. Back and stomach sleepers usually do. Hot sleepers will appreciate that latex runs cool natively, with no gel infusions or phase-change marketing layers needed.
The customizable firmness is genuinely useful. The mattress arrives with three latex layers stacked in a specific order. After 30 nights, if you don’t like the firmness, you can rearrange the layers (or swap one for a different ILD) without sending the bed back. Few mattresses offer this.
What our 60-night test found
Two testers, 60 nights, Medium firmness configuration with the 12-inch height.
- Pressure relief was good for the back sleeper, mediocre for the side sleeper. The Medium config measured 6.4/10 firmness, slightly firmer than the brand’s claim.
- Surface temperature held within 0.8°F of ambient over a four-hour cycle. The best cooling number we’ve recorded on a foam-topped bed in 2026.
- Motion isolation was the weak spot. We measured 5.8/10. Couples sleeping different schedules will feel each other’s transitions.
- Edge support compressed 4 inches under a 180 lb load at the perimeter. Below average for the price.
After 60 nights, we rearranged the layers to put the firmer Dunlop second from the top. The result was meaningfully better for our back sleeper and worse for the side sleeper. Worth experimenting if your initial config doesn’t work.
The honest cons
The motion isolation is real and limiting. If you share a queen with a partner who tosses, this is the wrong bed. The Amerisleep AS3 or the Puffy Lux will treat couples better.
The 100-night trial is short for an organic mattress. Latex takes 30 to 60 nights to break in fully, which leaves a narrow window to decide if you want to keep it. The return shipping cost (or $149 pickup) makes the trial less generous than competitors offering free returns.
Side sleepers under 130 lb will find even the Medium firmness too firm. The brand offers a Soft option, but it costs extra and isn’t always in stock.
Botanical Bliss vs Avocado Green Mattress
The closest direct comparison. Both are GOLS-certified organic latex hybrids in the same price tier. The Avocado has a longer trial (365 nights vs 100) and free returns. The Botanical Bliss is all-latex (no coils), customizable post-purchase, and has the longer warranty (25 years).
If you specifically want all-latex, take the Botanical Bliss. If you want a latex-and-coil hybrid feel, take the Avocado. Both are credible organic picks. The Botanical Bliss customization option is the differentiator.
The honest pick
The Botanical Bliss is the right mattress for buyers who prioritize materials over feel. The certification stack is real. The construction is honest. The customizable firmness is a feature most competitors don’t offer.
It’s the wrong mattress for couples sensitive to motion, side sleepers under 130 lb who need plush, and anyone who can’t afford to risk the return shipping cost. For everyone else, this is the cleanest bed in the under-$1,800 organic category and probably the longest-lasting.
Also tested in this category
- Saatva Classic review
- Amerisleep AS3 Hybrid review
- Puffy Lux Hybrid review






