
Eco Terra is an organic latex hybrid built around GOTS-certified cotton and wool, GOLS-certified Dunlop latex, and a pocketed-coil core. Editorial reviewers (Sleep Foundation, Sleepopolis, Sleep Junkie) rate it 8.8-9.0 out of 10. Here is who it fits, the trade-offs, and how to choose between medium and medium-firm.
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The Eco Terra Hybrid Latex Mattress is one of the few organic latex hybrids that ships at near-traditional-mattress prices. It pairs a 3-inch GOLS-certified Dunlop latex comfort layer with a fabric-encased pocketed-coil base, wrapped in a GOTS-certified organic cotton cover and wool batting. Editorial testers across Sleep Foundation, Sleepopolis, and Sleep Junkie rate it between 8.8 and 9.0 out of 10 — high marks driven by cooling, durability, and the certified-organic build.
This review distills what those independent tests found, where the original 2024 Banner write-up was thin, and how to decide between the two firmness options.
The Eco Terra is an 11-inch hybrid with four working layers:
Firmness ships in two flavors: medium (~5/10) and medium-firm (~7/10). The medium runs slightly softer than the label suggests, per multiple reviewers.

Pressure relief (7.5/10). The latex contours without the deep hug of memory foam. Side sleepers under 230 lbs report good shoulder/hip relief on the medium; heavier side sleepers should default to medium-firm and budget for a topper if they need more give.
Cooling (8/10). No memory-foam heat trap. Latex breathes; the wool layer pulls moisture; the coil layer keeps airflow moving under the comfort layer. This is one of the cooler organic mattresses in its price band.
Edge support (7.5/10). Reinforced 13-gauge perimeter coils mean you can sit on the edge to tie your shoes without a steep collapse. Better than most all-foam beds, comparable to traditional innersprings.
Motion isolation (6/10). This is the trade-off. Latex is responsive; pocketed coils help, but a memory-foam hybrid will dampen movement better. If you co-sleep with a restless partner, weigh this honestly.
Durability (8.5/10). Latex is one of the longer-lived comfort materials, and the steel coil base holds up. Sleep Foundation projects 9-10 year usable life — well above the 6-8 year industry average.
Pricing changes with promotions; check the retailer for current numbers. As of the most recent editorial reviews, queens have been running roughly in the $1,000-$1,400 range — well below most certified-organic latex hybrids.
Yes — independent editorial reviewers (Sleep Foundation, Sleepopolis, Sleep Junkie) rate it between 8.8 and 9.0 out of 10. It is strongest for hot sleepers, side sleepers, and combo sleepers who want certified-organic materials without paying premium-brand prices. It is a weaker pick for restless co-sleepers (motion transfer) and stomach sleepers over 230 lbs.
Eco Terra mattresses are handcrafted in California using GOLS-certified organic Dunlop latex, GOTS-certified organic cotton, and organic wool. The certified-organic supply chain is one of the brand's main selling points.
Both are certified-organic latex hybrids. The Avocado Green ships in one firmness (firmer than Eco Terra's medium), uses Dunlop latex, and carries a longer 1-year trial and bigger price tag. Eco Terra is cheaper, ships in two firmness options, and uses Dunlop latex as well. Pick Avocado for the brand and trial length; pick Eco Terra for value.
Default to medium-firm if you weigh over 230 lbs, sleep mostly on your back or stomach, or share the bed and want a more stable feel. Choose medium if you are under 230 lbs, sleep mostly on your side, or want more cushion for shoulders and hips. The medium tends to feel slightly softer than its label suggests, per multiple editorial reviews.
Cool. Sleep Foundation rates temperature control 8/10. Latex sleeps cooler than memory foam, the wool layer wicks moisture, and the pocketed coils keep airflow moving below the comfort layer. It is one of the cooler organic mattresses in its price band.
Eco Terra ships with a 90-night sleep trial and a 15-year warranty, with free shipping to the contiguous US. The trial is shorter than some competitors (Saatva offers 365 nights, Avocado 1 year), and customer reports note that returns can include a restocking element and self-managed pickup — confirm the current return policy with the retailer before ordering.
Compare the Eco Terra against other tested mattresses in our reviews library.
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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