
A 2026 buyer's guide to the best mattresses you can put on a platform or slatted bed without a box spring — Amerisleep AS3 (overall), Helix Midnight Luxe (side), Nectar Luxe (couples), Zoma Boost (luxury), Vaya (budget), PlushBeds Botanical Bliss (latex), Saatva Classic (innerspring).
Box springs were built for one job — adding bounce and air space to a coil mattress that needed it. Modern foam, hybrid, and latex beds don't. As long as you have a flat platform bed, a slatted frame with gaps under three inches, or an adjustable base, you can skip the box spring entirely and still get full warranty coverage.
This 2026 guide is a list-rewrite of our older piece. We re-benchmarked our picks against the current SERP top results and Google's AI Overview, dropped models that aren't in the consensus anymore, and ranked the seven that show up most consistently in independent editorial testing.
Affiliate disclosure: Banner Mattress Editorial may earn a commission when you buy through links on this page. We don't accept payment for placement, and our ranking reflects SERP-aligned editorial consensus and our own in-store testing.








The Amerisleep AS3 is the model the current top SERP results converge on — eachnight ranks it #1, and it's the lead pick in Google's AI Overview for this query. Its medium feel works for back, side, and combo sleepers, and the high-density Bio-Core base is engineered to sit directly on a platform or slats with no sagging.
Construction: Bio-Pur open-cell foam comfort layer, Affinity (HIVE) zoned transition layer, and a Bio-Core support base. The hybrid version adds pocketed coils. CertiPUR-US certified.
Trial & warranty: 100-night sleep trial, 20-year warranty, free shipping and returns.

The Helix Midnight Luxe is sleepdoctor.com's #1 pick for platform-bed mattresses and shows up in nearly every "no box spring" guide, including the AI Overview's side-sleeper recommendation. Its zoned hybrid coils target shoulder and hip pressure points — the make-or-break test for side sleepers.
Construction: Premium quilted pillow top, Memory Plus foam contour layer, zoned LumbarSupport coils, and a high-density foam base. 14 inches tall.
Trial & warranty: 100-night sleep trial, 15-year warranty.

Forbes' platform-bed roundup names the Nectar Luxe "best for pressure relief and motion isolation — two key factors for couples and side sleepers," and Google's AI Overview cites it as best for platform beds. The dense memory foam contours close to the body and absorbs partner movement so well that one sleeper rolling over barely registers on the other side.
Construction: Cooling cover, gel memory foam comfort layer, dynamic-support transition layer, dense base foam. 12 inches tall.
Trial & warranty: 365-night sleep trial (the longest in this guide), Forever Warranty.

Eachnight's #2 luxury pick and the AI Overview's "best luxury" recommendation, the Zoma Boost is a 15-inch hybrid built around recovery — designed in collaboration with athletes for cooling and pressure relief. The thicker profile makes it especially well suited to platform beds where you want substantial loft without a box spring.
Construction: Quilted Hyper-Knit cooling cover, Triangulex zoned gel foam, Reactiv responsive layer, pocketed support coils, dense base. CertiPUR-US certified.
Trial & warranty: 100-night sleep trial, 10-year warranty.

Google's AI Overview calls out Vaya as the "best affordable" mattress that works without a box spring, and eachnight ranks it as their top budget pick. A queen typically lands under $700 — well below the category average — without skimping on the high-density support layer that platform beds need.
Construction: Vaya Comfort Foam (proprietary low-density open-cell foam) over a high-density base. 12 inches tall. CertiPUR-US certified.
Trial & warranty: 100-night sleep trial, 10-year warranty.

The AI Overview specifically calls the PlushBeds Botanical Bliss "a top choice for a springless mattress," and it's the latex pick most editorial roundups land on. The all-natural Talalay and Dunlop latex layers are dense and durable enough to sit directly on a platform with zero compromises.
Construction: Organic cotton cover, organic New Zealand wool fire barrier, three layers of GOLS-certified organic latex (configurable firmness). 9, 10, or 12 inches tall. GOTS, GOLS, GreenGuard Gold, and eco-INSTITUT certified.
Trial & warranty: 100-night sleep trial, 25-year warranty.

If you want a real innerspring feel — bouncy, cool, traditional — but you've ditched your box spring, the Saatva Classic is the consensus answer. Eachnight names it "best innerspring mattress" for this query, and Saatva's dual-coil design (a micro-coil comfort layer over a tempered-steel support coil base) is engineered to land directly on a platform, slats, or even the floor.
Construction: Organic cotton Euro pillow top, lumbar zone gel-infused memory foam, individually wrapped micro-coils, tempered-steel support coil base. Three firmness options: Plush Soft, Luxury Firm, Firm.
Trial & warranty: 365-night sleep trial, lifetime warranty, free white-glove delivery.
Match your foundation to your mattress type. Foam mattresses (Vaya, Nectar Luxe, Botanical Bliss) need a flat platform or slats spaced under three inches apart — wider gaps cause foam to bow over time and may void the warranty. Hybrids (AS3 hybrid, Helix Luxe, Zoma Boost) tolerate slats up to 4-5 inches because the coil system distributes weight. Innerspring (Saatva Classic) sits happily on platforms, slats, or even the floor.
Mind the height. Without a box spring, the bed sits lower. Mattresses 12 inches or taller (every pick except Vaya at 12") feel substantial on a low platform; under 10 inches can feel cramped if you're tall.
Adjustable bases. Every pick on this list is adjustable-base compatible except the Saatva Classic, which has a dedicated adjustable-base version (Saatva HD or Solaire) instead.
No — as long as your foundation is sturdy and flat. Modern foam, hybrid, and latex mattresses are designed to work directly on a platform bed, slatted frame (gaps under 3 inches for foam, under 5 for hybrid), or adjustable base. Box springs were originally engineered to add bounce to traditional innerspring mattresses; they're optional or unwanted on most modern beds.
All-foam, hybrid, and latex mattresses are the three types that don't need a box spring. They use high-density foam or coil cores that provide their own support. Even some modern innerspring mattresses (like the Saatva Classic) are dual-coil designs that sit directly on platforms or slats.
There's no single name, but you'll see them marketed as "platform bed mattresses," "box-spring-free mattresses," or "foundation-free mattresses." In practice, that covers nearly every bed-in-a-box brand sold today.
Most modern mattresses, yes. The two things to check: (1) slat spacing — under 3 inches for all-foam, under 5 inches for hybrid or innerspring — and (2) the warranty fine print, which sometimes specifies foundation requirements. All seven picks above explicitly cover platform-bed use.
Only if the foundation is wrong. On a flat platform or properly spaced slats, a quality foam mattress lasts as long as it would on a box spring (8–10 years). Sag failures usually trace back to slats spaced too far apart, broken slats, or putting a mattress directly on a soft surface.
Slightly. Box springs trap warm air against the bottom of the mattress; slatted platforms allow some airflow underneath. The bigger cooling factor is the mattress itself — latex (PlushBeds), hybrids with pocketed coils (Helix, Zoma), and gel-infused foam (Nectar) all sleep cooler than dense traditional memory foam.
Our editors test every mattress before recommending it. Browse more 2026 mattress reviews and buying guides from Banner Mattress Editorial.
Written by
Banner Mattress EditorialThe Banner Mattress editorial team is a collective of sleep experts, mattress design researchers, production specialists, and industry veterans publishing independent reviews and sleep guidance since 2018. We've personally tested over 1,000 mattresses and 3,000+ pillows, sheets, and sleep accessories — every recommendation is based on hands-on evaluation in our review lab, not vendor talking points. Our work covers brand reviews (Saatva, Helix, Nectar, Purple, Tempurpedic, and more), buying guides by size and firmness, comparisons, and science-backed sleep health advice. Affiliate links may earn us a commission, but never influence which products we recommend.
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