Latest news with #Otty


The Guardian
16-03-2025
- Health
- The Guardian
Otty Original Hybrid mattress review: the best hybrid mattress you can buy – and also one of the cheapest
I've been reviewing mattresses for about four years and suffering from broken sleep for three times as long. The right mattress can markedly improve sleep quality, but switching between them so regularly seemed to feed my insomnia. Then I met the Otty Original Hybrid and I was blissfully dead to the world. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. The Original Hybrid is the flagship 'bed-in-a-box' mattress from UK company Otty Sleep. It combines thousands of pocket springs with multiple layers of memory foam – some soft, some thumpingly firm – to offer robust ergonomic support without sacrificing comfort. At less than £680 for a double, it's among the cheapest bed-in-a-box hybrids (meaning a combination of memory foam and springs) you can buy, and after testing several I'm confident that it's the best buy. The Otty is one of only two mattresses that I tested – along with the more expensive Simba Hybrid Pro – that resulted in an excellent sleep from night one. After weeks of marvellous kip, a mattress-scoring family session and rigorous lab-style tests later, it replaced the Simba as the mattress I was most reluctant to give up. Here, I explain why. View at Otty I slept on a double Otty Original Hybrid for several weeks, alongside my husband, on our robust slatted wooden bed base. As with all the mattresses I tested, I tracked the Otty's impact on our sleep quality and other factors, such as body aches, night sweats and disturbances from tossing and turning. I also ran tests to measure factors including sinkage and heat retention, and I enlisted the help of my locally based family to assess its firmness, comfort and value for money. View at Otty The Original Hybrid is one of Otty's slate of nine mattresses, all but two of which are hybrids. As with all hybrid mattresses, it combines pocket springs with various densities of foam to strike a balance of support (mainly from springs) and cushioning (mainly from foam). Topping off these layers is a soft cover that you can unzip and machine wash. Prices for the Original Hybrid start at £499.99 for a single and rise to £874.99 for an emperor size (200 x 200cm), with a double costing £674.99 (a double Simba Hybrid Pro is £1,149, although it is on offer for £942.18). Indeed, none of Otty's mattresses is wildly expensive. The cheapest Aura Hybrid costs £474.99 for a double, while the priciest hybrid double is the Pure+ Hybrid 4000 (£874.99). At 25cm deep and with six layers, there's less of the Otty than the 28cm eight-layer Simba Hybrid Pro. Its 2,000 spring count lands midway between the Simba (which has nearly 5,000) and the budget Ikea Valevåg (fewer than 300), although the Otty's springs are particularly tall at 16cm. The Otty also includes a couple of layers of high-density foam to enhance the support from the springs. Its largest foam layer is a dense base for support and durability, and there's another robust layer just above the springs to limit bounce and improve motion isolation. Other memory foam layers include a heat-regulating layer below the washable cover, which I found gave the mattress a lovely breathable feel. Otty describes the Original Hybrid as 'medium firm', but that term is a movable feast so I used a set of weights to find out where it really ranked. During my first month of testing, it sank a maximum of 25mm under 7.5kg of weight – closer to the firmest mattress I've tested (the Origin Hybrid Pro, which sank 18mm) than the softest (the Eve Wunderflip Hybrid, 40mm). According to that, and the impressions of my family, the Hybrid Pro is at the firmer end of medium firm. All memory foam softens over time, however, so you should rotate the mattress from head to toe once a month to avoid indentations where you sleep. You're not supposed to flip the mattress. As with all bed-in-a-box mattress companies and their lack of showrooms, you can't try the Original Hybrid before you buy it. But if it doesn't hit the spot for you, you have 100 nights to sleep on it (using sheets to protect it) before deciding whether to keep it for good. During that time, Otty will collect it for free and give you a full refund. I tried this service five years ago with an Otty I'd bought, and it worked as promised, no questions asked. You also get a 10-year guarantee that covers manufacturing defects but excludes damage you may have caused by 'standing on or jumping on the mattress'. How Otty would know you'd done this, I'm not sure. It makes me wonder about the solidity and durability of a mattress if you're banned from standing on it, but this is a common warranty condition for hybrids. Type: hybridFirmness: advertised as medium firm, panel rated as 8/10Depth: 25cmCover: unzip to wash at 40CTurn or rotate: rotate once a month for first 12 months, then every three monthsTrial period: 100 nightsWarranty: 10 yearsOld mattress recycling: £40Sustainability credentials: foam is CertiPUR- and Europur-approved for environmental standards As with all the mattresses I've tested for the Filter, the Otty was packaged and delivered in bed-in-a-box fashion. That means it's vacuum-shrunk by machines in the factory, encased in metres of sturdy plastic to keep it from expanding, and then delivered to your home in a big cardboard box. Delivery of all my test mattresses was a near-identical experience. The Otty, like most, was handled by third-party couriers (ArrowXL in this case; only the Ikea Valevåg was delivered by a manufacturer-branded team) and took less than a week. I had to be at home, but I was kept fully in the loop by text alerts from Otty the day before and of delivery, with a pleasingly tight two-hour window and a link to track the driver on a map. Otty charges £10 to deliver your mattress to a room of your choice, but I plumped for having it left in the hallway. I then needed my husband's help to remove the frankly insane amount of packaging (standard for bed-in-a-box mattresses, sadly). Otty does make it easier than most, though, with a special plastic-slicing tool that helps avoid nicking the mattress. I wouldn't sleep on the expanding Original Hybrid after a few hours as Otty says is possible – it just won't be comfortable – but ours had fully expanded after about a day and a half. This was faster than the more sumptuous Simba and slower than the cheaper pocket-sprung Ikea Valevåg, which suggests that a higher memory foam content requires a longer expansion time. Sleep doesn't always come easily to me – I've been known to need two baths and several bowls of soup to help me nod off – but the Otty worked like a sleeping pill in mattress form. The sleep tracker on my smartwatch also revealed that I woke up briefly in the night (microarousals) less often than usual. I put this down to the Otty's outstanding balance of ergonomic support, cushioning and breathability. Sign up to The Filter Get the best shopping advice from the Filter team straight to your inbox. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. after newsletter promotion Pre-sleep, I'd asked my panel (otherwise known as my family) to come over and rate the Otty alongside five other mattresses. They rated it as less firm than I did, putting it at 8/10 – near the middle of the pool for mattress firmness. For overall comfort, however, they ranked it the best, with an average score of 8.3/10. 'Can we have this one?' asked my sister, noting that the Otty is surprisingly light and manoeuvrable for such a robust mattress, and would be relatively easy to transport across town to her house. Having designated myself lead tester, I had to put my foot down. The Otty was ours, at least until testing was over and it was collected for charity. My husband, Alan, and I slept on it for two months and both found its supportiveness to be a relief after some more challengingly soft and inconsistent sleeping surfaces. It's not too firm for comfort, though. As a petite side sleeper, I need a bit of cushioning to accommodate my shoulders and hips, and I get lower back pain on very firm mattresses – but this didn't happen with the Otty. Its motion isolation is also excellent. Sharing my bouncy old sprung mattress with a fidgety sleeper was less fun than it sounds because the springs seemed to amplify his (and my) tossing and turning. The Otty doesn't completely lack bounce, especially on my bed's slatted base, but its foam layers absorb movement beautifully to help me sleep in peace. A big downside of memory foam is that it can trap heat, but I don't find this to be true for the Original Hybrid – at least not any more. A previous iteration of the Otty Hybrid, which I tried in 2019, felt … clingy. There was no breathing space between the fabric and my skin. Today's Otty Original Hybrid rectifies this with a cosy-but-cooling feel. Asked for their impressions of its breathability, my family awarded 8.3/10: less airy than the pocket-sprung Ikea Valevåg, but more than the Simba. I've yet to try it out in summer, but my lab tests suggested that the Otty works well to stop you from overheating at night. Using a heat pad, a thermometer and my husband's bottom, I discovered that the Otty cooled down faster than rivals that contain more foam, including the Simba and the Eve Wunderflip Hybrid. Another gold star for the Otty was its snug fit for my fitted sheets. At 25cm deep, it's not a thin mattress, but it's slim enough for a secure fit. As a fan of a perfectly flat cotton sleep surface, I regard this as an absolute must. The 28cm-deep Simba is a tighter squeeze, and the 31cm Origin Hybrid Pro is so big you can't use standard-depth fitted sheets. There's little I don't love about the Otty. The only other mattress that felt as instantly comfortable, the Simba Hybrid Pro, costs much more and didn't seem to retain its consistent supportiveness as well as the Otty over the months of testing. Some people will find the Otty too firm for comfort, though. My 84-year-old dad was alone in our testing panel to find the Otty too hard on his joints – a sensation I experienced with the firmer Origin Hybrid Pro. Memory foam softens over the months, however, and I noticed a slight sinkage in the sleeping surface over my two months of testing. The sinkage was less pronounced than with the Simba, and it didn't stop me from sleeping and waking in comfort. The Otty betrays its relative cheapness in a few ways. Edge and corner support could be much improved. 'Do the springs even go right to the edge?' asked Alan, alarmed by the way the mattress flattened beneath him when he sat on the side. Its relatively nimble weight also gives the Otty a less extravagant feel than the Simba, Eve or Origin, and may point to more limited durability. Two months is long enough for me to test its impact on my sleep but it's too short to judge its stamina, and I suspect that its less sophisticated construction will see the Otty retain its consistent supportiveness for less time than its more expensive rivals. Bear that in mind if you're trying to spend more wisely by investing in homewares that will last many years. The metal springs and polyester fabric used in the Otty are easily and widely recycled, but memory foam is another matter. The memory foam used in mattresses is viscoelastic LRPu (low-resistance polyurethane foam) – polyurethane that's been chemically treated to make it elastic and dense in various degrees – and its energy-intensive manufacture is more complex than its pronunciation. It is not biodegradable and, despite the best efforts of industry bodies, it's hard to paint it as sustainable. To its credit, Otty has striven to make its mattresses as sustainable as possible given the materials used. All its foam is certified by Europur and CertiPur and made in line with EU legislation to minimise any health and environmental impact. No ozone depleters, TDCPP, mercury or lead are used in manufacturing and every foam batch is tested to ensure it's non-toxic and hypoallergenic. Otty runs a mattress recycling service, charging £40 (plus £20 for each additional one) to take away your old mattress and recycle it, whether it's an Otty or not. This is cheaper than rivals, with Simba charging £50. I haven't tested Otty's recycling service and can't confirm what actually happens to collected mattresses, but the company says 'they are responsibly recycled, with materials like foam, fabric and metal springs being repurposed to minimise waste and protect the environment'. The Otty Original Hybrid is a comfortable and wonderfully supportive mattress that improved my sleep from the first night. It's less heavy and less expensive than some rivals, but it outclassed them in my tests. It may prove to be less durable than them, but its 10-year warranty reassures me that it's good for thousands of superb sleeps. View at Otty Jane Hoskyn is a freelance consumer journalist and WFH pioneer with three decades of experience in rearranging bookshelves and 'testing' coffee machines while deadlines loom. Her work has made her a low-key expert in all manner of consumables, from sports watches to solar panels. She would always rather be in the woods


The Guardian
06-02-2025
- Business
- The Guardian
The best mattresses: sleep better with our six rigorously tested picks
A good mattress improves your sleep, say mattress makers – and they would, wouldn't they? But they're right. The older I get, the more I know it. When I was 20, I could sleep anywhere: a friend's floor, a filthy sofa – even a phone box one night. These days I won't get a single one of 40 winks if I'm not lying on a decent mattress. Comfy but firm, cosy but breathable, and with loads of cool spots for my feet. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. Today's best mattresses promise all this and more. Gone are the days when your biggest decision was between a sprung double or a sprung king size. Pocket springs are still around, but they face stiff – well, medium firm – competition from hybrid mattresses that combine springs and memory foam to provide that all-important balance of comfort and support. Current in-vogue bed brands tend not to have showrooms, so you can't normally try out their mattresses before you buy. Instead, they vacuum-shrink them in the factory for delivery straight to your door. These bed-in-a-box mattresses come with long trials, but you're still buying blind. I've tried to shed some light on which are the best by trying them out for you. I, along with a panel of my family members, tested six bestselling bed-in-a-box mattresses. Among them was a pocket sprung model and five hybrids (which combine memory foam with other materials), covering various degrees of firmness, features and price tags. I'll test more – including at least one all-foam mattress – in the coming months. Meanwhile, here's how my family got on with our top six, including the one my dad gave up on and the one my niece didn't want to give back. Best overall mattress: Otty Original HybridFrom £499.99 (single) to £874.99 (emperor) at Otty Best mattress for couples: Simba Hybrid ProFrom £799 (single) to £1,349 (super king) at Simba Best budget mattress: Ikea ValevågFrom £149 (single) to £359 (super king) at Ikea I've spent three decades testing products, from mattress toppers to heated clothes airers, so I'm professionally sceptical of manufacturers' claims to magically improve our lives by buying their stuff. I also have a solid background in napping, insomnia and swearing at alarm clocks, so I welcomed the chance to sleep on the job. First, I needed some sleepers. I wanted a broad range of feedback from people of varying sizes who sleep in various positions. I asked my dad (84), my niece (22), my sister and our husbands to join my mattress panel. We each spent at least a fortnight (and sometimes months) sleeping on an allocated mattress. Before we divvied them up, my panel assembled to offer their impressions of every mattress on test. We turned our house into a mattress showroom and invited everyone to sit, bounce and lay down on every test sample, alone and together. This enabled us to compare the mattresses side by side and get an overview of their pros and cons. I collected scores out of 10 for everyone's assessment of firmness and other factors such as breathability, motion isolation and overall comfort, then worked out our average score for each mattress. We then divided the mattresses and began the sleeping tests. To quantify sleep quality, I used the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, which uses a questionnaire to assess factors such as how long it takes to nod off. I used this as the basis and added questions such as whether they felt back pain or woke up in the night. Some of us also used our smartwatches to gather sleep-tracking stats. Other factors were easier to test on my own. I used dumbbell weights to measure how far each mattress sank under various weights, while an infrared thermometer and heat pad revealed how fast they could cool under a warm body. A glass of water on the surface gave an idea of how well the mattress would absorb the movement of a restless partner ('motion isolation'). Environmental credentials were another important consideration. Mattress makers are secretive about the life cycles of their products, but I discovered what I could about the materials used, their manufacture and their potential for recycling. I also checked verified reviews from paying customers and excluded any mattresses for which delivery and customer service received significant negative feedback. Read on for my guide to the best mattresses, based on these thorough tests. The mattresses sourced for this article are being donated to two charities: Southampton-based poverty support group Scratch and Hampshire-based survivors' advocacy organisation Stop Domestic Abuse. To dive deeper in to my testing process, read how I tested mattresses for comfort, cost and sustainability Otty's flagship offering is a firm but cosy and supremely comfortable mattress that helped me sleep fantastically from the first night of testing. The only other that managed this was the Simba Hybrid Pro, which is hundreds of pounds more expensive. Why we love itThe Otty has an outstanding balance of support, cushioning and breathability. My husband and I slept on it for two months and were sad to see it go. It feels ergonomically supportive from edge to edge, with no dip in the middle even after several weeks. It's not too hard for comfort, though. As a small side sleeper, I get lower back pain on very firm mattresses, but this didn't happen with the Otty. My sleep tracker also revealed that I woke up briefly in the night ('microarousals') less often than usual. The surface felt breathable and cooled down faster than most other hybrids in my heat-retention tests. When I asked my family to dive in, they put the Otty fourth overall on firmness – squarely at the firm end of the wide medium-firm spectrum – and gave it the highest rating for overall comfort, with an average of 8.3/10. It's a shame that … the firmness we loved won't be welcomed by everyone. If you're upgrading from a well-used pocket-sprung mattress, the strong flat surface of the Otty may take some adapting to. Suitable for: anyone who wants to upgrade to a hybrid without forking out four figures Type: hybridFirmness: advertised as medium firm, panel rated as 8/10Depth: 25cmCover: unzip to wash at 40CTurn or rotate: rotate once a month for first 12 months, then every three monthsTrial period: 100 nightsWarranty: 10 yearsOld mattress recycling: £40Sustainability credentials: foam is CertiPUR- and Europur-approved for environmental standards From £499.99 (single) to £874.99 (emperor) at Otty This sumptuous mattress also had me sleeping soundly from the off. It's expensive, and won't be firm enough for some, but its wonderfully comfy surface makes you feel like you're sleeping on a cloud – and it may even bring peace if you share your bed with a fidgety partner (or the dog, or the kids). Why we love itThe medium-firm Simba Hybrid Pro is supportive enough for most people, but it has a cosy, yielding feel that may be down to its upper layer of natural wool. The overall effect is luxurious and decidedly soporific. The Hybrid Pro had the best motion isolation in my test. The mattress doesn't completely lack bounce, especially on a slatted base, but its foam layers absorb movement so well that it genuinely helped me and my husband sleep through each other's tossing and turning. Temperature regulation was less impressive, and I wanted to disown my armpits a few times after waking up. The mattress also softened noticeably in the middle after several weeks of testing, but this is common with hybrids and may be welcomed by sleepers who like the way foam adapts to your body over time. Our panel's collective firmness score was 7/10 and our comfort average was an excellent 8.1/10, although my husband and sister found it a bit too soft. It's a shame that … the price tag is chunky, especially for a mattress that may not maintain its support consistently enough for firm-bed fans. Suitable for: couples who crave a bit of peace (but still want to share a bed)Type: hybridFirmness: advertised as medium firm, panel rated as 7/10Depth: 28cmCover: unzip to wash at 40CTurn or rotate: rotate once a month for first three months, then every three monthsTrial period: 200 nightsWarranty: 10 yearsOld mattress recycling: £50Sustainability credentials: Simba is B Corp certified and aiming for net zero by 2030. Hybrid Pro foam is CertiPUR approved From £799 (single) to £1,349 (super king) at Simba Ikea's popular mattress is a bed-in-a-box bargain. It's not a hybrid but instead wraps its pocket springs in slim layers of polyfoam for cushioning. It feels much less robust than its pricier rivals, but it'd be a great choice for the kids or the spare room. Why we love itSimplicity has its benefits. The Valevåg expanded to full size faster than the hybrids and was much lighter. Finally, a mattress I could lift and manoeuvre by myself, including up and down stairs. For similar reasons, Ikea's mattress is wonderfully breathable and may feel cooler in summer than a hybrid. With no memory foam to trap heat, it cooled down faster than any other mattress in my temperature-control test. Hi-tech open-cell foam is all very well for letting the air circulate, but plain old springs do the same for a lot less cash. My 22-year-old niece, Alex, slept on the Valevåg for two months and was energetically reluctant to give it back. She said it felt supportive enough without being 'solid like some of the others'. It's a shame that … the Valevåg doesn't hide its cheapness. Our average firmness score was 6.8/10, which barely qualifies for 'medium firm' (although Ikea does make a 'firm' version). The bounce of the springs also means motion isolation is poor. Suitable for: young buyers starting out or for a guest room Type: pocket sprungFirmness: advertised as medium firm, panel rated as 6.8/10Depth: 24cmCover: not removableTurn or rotate: not neededTrial period: 365 nightsWarranty: 10 yearsOld mattress recycling: £40 via the Mattress Recycling PeopleSustainability credentials: 2025 target of 20% recycled content in all Ikea mattress foams Sign up to The Filter Get the best shopping advice from the Filter team straight to your inbox. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. after newsletter promotion From £149 (single) to £359 (super king) at Ikea Best for: couples who both love a firm orthopaedic mattress Origin claims its Hybrid Pro is 'medium firm' but it is nothing of the sort and instead came top in all my measures of firmness. If, like my sister Maeve and her husband, Ben, you crave the strong pushback of a solid mattress, you will love it. Lucky for them, they got to test it for two months. This gigantic, heavy hybrid also delivers outstanding temperature regulation and motion isolation. Maeve and Ben reported that the 'silky surface with long dents' kept them cool without feeling cold, and after years on a pocket-sprung mattress, they declared its movement-absorbing powers to be 'life changing'. It didn't make the final cut because … this level of firmness is too hard for many, including me. The 31cm depth also means your standard fitted sheets won't fit, and the cover isn't removable. Type: hybrid; firmness: advertised as medium firm, panel rated as 8.2/10; depth: 31cm; cover: not removable; rotate: not needed; trial: 200 nights; warranty: 15 years; old mattress recycling: £54; sustainability: foam is CertiPUR approved; returned mattresses go to the British Heart Foundation From £527.45 (single) to £840.95 (super king) at Origin Best for: couples who like a well-cushioned surface Eve describes the Wunderflip as a double-sided mattress. It has a solid central section that's firmer on one side than the other, so you flip it (with a little effort) to select your level of firmness. You then zip on a thick, spongy 'comfort layer' – much like a mattress topper – on whichever side you choose. My weight tests and family feedback revealed the two sides to be disappointingly similar. Both were too soft for Maeve and Ben, who slept on this mattress for a fortnight before switching to the much firmer Origin. Their daughter Alex tried it out and also found it too soft, as did my husband. I liked the Wunderflip much more than my family did. Its supportive base layers provide strong, consistent pushback beneath the cushioned top layer, especially when you choose the 'firmer' side. The foamy cushioning is brilliant at absorbing movement, and it all feels extremely robust. It didn't make the final cut because … the 'flip for firmness' idea doesn't really work, because both sides are similarly soft – perhaps because the removable 'comfort layer' is so soft. The hulking weight (more than 50kg for a double) makes it tricky to manoeuvre. Better to pick a side and stick with it. Type: hybrid; firmness: advertised as medium on one side and firm on the other, panel rated as 4.3 and 6.5 respectively; depth: 28cm; cover: not removable; rotate: once a month for first 12 months, then every three months; trial: 200 nights; warranty: 10 years; old mattress recycling: £50; sustainability: foam is CertiPUR approved and CFC/PBDE-free; cover is Oekotex certified From £499 (double) to £599 (super king) at Eve Best for: larger people who need solid support, and anyone who overheats at night This fabulous-looking hybrid excels at motion isolation and temperature regulation, and its naturally hypoallergenic bamboo yarn cover may help limit morning sneezes. But it's a very firm mattress that divided my family on its comfort levels. I had allocated the Panda to my dad for the sleep test, but he couldn't get on with it, describing it as 'hard on my joints'. It felt too firm for me, too. My husband and brother-in-law – both much taller than my dad and me – loved the solid support, though, and noted that it's perfect for reading in bed sat up. It didn't make the final cut because … it's too firm for some. The cover is removable, but inconveniently in one big unit, like one big mattress shell. Type: hybrid; firmness: advertised as medium firm to firm, panel rated as 8/10; depth: 25cm; cover: remove to wash at 30C; rotate: every 6 months; trial: 100 nights; warranty: 10 years; old mattress recycling: free; sustainability: foam is CertiPUR approved; polyester content is made from 'recycled ocean bottles'; will recycle old mattress From £649 (single) to £1,050 (EU emperor) at Panda London The bed-in-a-box industry is like Deliveroo for mattresses. Instead of packing a takeaway in a plastic box and whizzing it to your door, companies such as Otty, Eve and Simba shrink their mattresses into metres and metres of plastic and deliver them to your home. Is it necessary? No, but like Deliveroo, it's convenient. The downside is that you're left with an awful lot of packaging. I mean, a hideous amount. Your recycling collection may take the huge cardboard boxes, but in most areas (including mine), they won't take the metres and metres of polyurethane wrapping. You'll have to take it to a household waste centre – unless you're redecorating and need a dust sheet. Bed-in-a-box companies don't have showrooms, so they let you sleep on your new mattress for months before you have to decide whether to keep it. My experience of these trials has been fairly smooth, with Otty and Emma both collecting mattresses and issuing refunds quickly. However, neither team was directly employed by the brands (only Ikea sent a branded van when delivering), and the Emma team didn't know what they were collecting. No delivery teams offered to take away my old mattress. Most brands offer to recycle old mattresses for a fee of about £50, but you have to organise that in addition to ordering your new mattress. It also seems expensive given that my local council's recycling team collects mattresses for £20. Bed-in-a-box warranties typically cover 10 years. That's excellent, but you'll have to be careful you don't void your guarantee by, for example, standing on the mattress or using an electric blanket (as foam can soften and even crack under too much heat). It's Black Friday all year round in mattress world. Bed-in-a-box companies seem to regard 'sale' prices as the rule rather than the exception, and Simba, Emma and Dormeo have all been sanctioned by the ASA for misleading marketing tactics. There are genuine deals to be found, however. If you're looking at a mattress deal and wondering how legit it is, search Pricerunner to see its price history. Free app Anytracker is less quick but delivers richer results, including alerts when your desired mattress meets your desired price. Jane Hoskyn is a freelance consumer journalist and WFH pioneer with three decades of experience in rearranging bookshelves and 'testing' coffee machines while deadlines loom. Her work has made her a low-key expert in all manner of consumables, from sports watches to solar panels. She would always rather be in the woods