The Contour5 is Saatva’s successor to the discontinued Loom & Leaf, which you will no longer find on the menu of the company’s site, but it’s still for sale here. Like all Saatva mattresses, it comes delivered on a moving truck instead of roll-packedâyou have to schedule a delivery, but you can sleep on it right away instead of letting it puff back up.
The Contour5 is quite similar to its predecessor and the Saatva Classic I’ve tested. There are now two firmness options instead of one, and it stands a half-inch taller than its predecessor. It also has updated cooling tech that utilizes airflow channels in the gel foam layer, and that gel foam is a half-inch thinner than the old version, which means less mass to retain heat. In my two weeks of testing, I found it was very good at remaining cool through summer nights when my power company kept hijacking my Ecobee, which is impressive given that it uses extra-dense 5-pound-weight memory foam (that’s the 5 in the name).
The Contour5 performs very much like the other two Saatva mattresses I’ve tested. It’s soft enough for side sleeping without feeling like a saggy hammock. It has excellent build quality and a very sturdy, solid feel. That’s especially impressive on the Contour5 given that it’s an all-foam mattress without a layer or two of springs. I prefer a hybrid with microcoils, but Saatva is popular for a reason, and as all-foam mattresses go, it has a true luxury feel.
Saatva Contour5 ranges from $1,899 for a twin mattress to $3,599 for a California king.
| Composition | Seven-layer foam |
| Firmness | Two options, firm is an 8/10 |
| Height | 12.5 inches |
| Cooling | Yes |
| Trial period | 365 nights |