Sleep Number unveils redesigned mattress portfolio after Travis Kelce partnership announcement

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Sleep Number has dramatically tightened its mattress lineup and introduced several new models that aim to make buying a smart bed less complicated. Announced alongside the company’s recent partnership with NFL star Travis Kelce, the refreshed portfolio — rolled out as of March 2026 — focuses on clearer choices across comfort, tech and temperature control.

The changes matter now because they condense what was a sprawling selection into a smaller set of distinct options, making it easier for shoppers to match price and performance without wading through a dozen near-identical models.

What changed and why it matters

Sleep Number reduced its mattress count from about a dozen models to seven, grouped into three clearly defined tiers. That shift is intended to simplify the shopping process while preserving the brand’s core features: adjustable firmness, personalized support and — in the upper tier — active temperature management.

For consumers, the consequences are practical: fewer SKUs to compare, clearer feature trade-offs and easier price benchmarking. For the wider bedding market, Sleep Number’s move underscores growing demand for beds that combine traditional materials with digital control and targeted cooling technologies.

At a glance

Collection Starting price (Queen) Key features
ComfortMode $1,599 App-free comfort options; includes ComfortMode and ComfortMode Lux with added hip support and cooling on the Lux model.
ComfortNext $2,999 Three new models (ComfortNext, ComfortNext Lux, ComfortNext Ultra); app control and Sleep Number’s first Tri‑Brid construction (micro coils + foam + air) for targeted support.
Climate $5,174.10 (ClimateCool) · $9,224.10 (Climate360) Science-based temperature regulation; Climate360 pairs broad thermal range with the company’s Smart adjustable base (head/foot adjust, Partner Snore, under-bed lighting, foot warming).

ComfortMode: the simpler, lower-cost entry

Starting at $1,599 for a queen, the ComfortMode line is pitched at shoppers who want individualized support without depending on smartphone controls. The two models in this tier split the difference between basic adjustability and additional comfort features: the higher-priced variant adds targeted hip reinforcement and improved cooling.

That means buyers who value straightforward, tactile adjustment can avoid the app ecosystem while still getting Sleep Number’s signature air-chamber feel.

ComfortNext: a tech-forward middle ground

With a queen price that begins at roughly $2,999, ComfortNext is the collection where Sleep Number places its most visible engineering advances. The line includes three mattresses and requires app integration to manage firmness and settings.

Two models within the group — the Lux and the Ultra — introduce the company’s Tri‑Brid architecture, combining micro coils, foam layers and adjustable air chambers to deliver more nuanced pressure relief, especially around the shoulders, hips and lower back.

That design is aimed at sleepers who want both the contouring of foam and the responsiveness of coils, while retaining the brand’s personalized firmness control.

Climate: focused on temperature control and full-featured bases

The Climate collection represents Sleep Number’s most expensive offering and the only series that markets active, research-backed cooling as a core feature. As of March 2026, promotional pricing places the ClimateCool at about $5,174.10 (down from $5,749) and the Climate360 at about $9,224.10 (down from $10,249).

Beyond a wider temperature range, the two beds differ chiefly in included bases. The ClimateCool ships on an integrated rigid base, while the Climate360 is paired with Sleep Number’s Smart adjustable base that brings motorized head/foot motion, snore mitigation tools and luxury touches like under-bed lighting and foot warming.

How to choose

Consider three questions before you shop: How much do you want app-driven customization? Is active temperature control a must? And where do you sit on price versus durability?

  • If you want simplicity: ComfortMode offers the core adjustable experience without mandatory app use.
  • If you want the most engineering for your money: ComfortNext is where Sleep Number mixes coils, foam and air for targeted pressure relief.
  • If temperature regulation and a feature-rich base matter: The Climate line is the only option with integrated, science-based cooling and the Smart adjustable base on the Climate360.

Sleep Number’s consolidation is a strategic bet: by narrowing options and clarifying what each collection delivers, the company appears to be prioritizing easier decision-making over an expansive catalog. For buyers, that can speed the comparison process — but it also means shoppers who liked formerly niche models may need to evaluate different feature mixes within the new structure.

Sleep Number’s redesigned range is available now; customers should check the latest model specs and current pricing when making a purchase decision.

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