Quick Answer: A folding cot with mattress gives overnight guests a comfortable, elevated sleeping surface that stores compactly when not in use. Look for a cot rated to at least 135 kg (300 lbs) with a foam mattress between 7.5 cm and 12.5 cm thick for the best balance of comfort, durability, and portability. Prices typically range from $80 to $350 depending on frame quality and mattress type.
In This Guide
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Why Choose a Folding Cot With Mattress
There is a particular kind of panic that sets in when someone calls to say they are visiting for the weekend and you realise your guest room has quietly become a home office. Or a storage room. Or both. A folding cot with mattress solves this problem without requiring you to dedicate an entire room to a bed that gets used four times a year.
The concept is straightforward. A folding cot is a portable bed frame, usually made of steel or aluminium, that collapses flat for storage. When paired with a compatible mattress, it provides a sleeping surface that rivals many permanent bed setups. Unlike air mattresses that slowly deflate at 3 a.m. or sleeping bags on the floor that make your guests feel like they are camping indoors, a good folding cot with mattress keeps the sleeper elevated, supported, and reasonably comfortable.
But "folding cot with mattress" covers a wide range of products. Some are lightweight camping cots with a thin foam pad. Others are heavy-duty rollaway beds with spring-supported mattresses that could pass for a real bed. The right choice depends on how often you will use it, who will sleep on it, and where you plan to store it.
Why Elevation Matters for Sleep Quality
Sleeping elevated off the floor is not just about comfort. Research published in the Journal of Physiological Anthropology found that ambient temperature significantly affects sleep architecture, particularly REM sleep and slow-wave sleep. Floor-level sleeping surfaces absorb cold from concrete or tile, which can disrupt the body's thermoregulation process. A folding cot raises the sleeper 30 to 50 cm off the ground, allowing air to circulate beneath the mattress and helping maintain a more stable sleeping temperature throughout the night.
Here in Brantford, we see plenty of families who need guest sleeping solutions for holiday visits, university students coming home for reading week, or grandchildren staying over during the summer. A folding cot with mattress is one of the most practical investments you can make if you host guests even a few times a year.
Types of Folding Cots and How They Differ
Not all folding cots are created equal. The differences between types matter more than most people expect, and choosing the wrong style can mean the difference between a guest who sleeps soundly and one who spends the night staring at your ceiling.
Rollaway Beds (Folding Guest Beds)
Rollaway beds are the most comfortable option in the folding cot category. They feature a spring deck or a slatted support system, a thicker mattress (usually 10 to 15 cm), and wheels for easy movement. Most rollaway beds fold in half and stand upright for closet storage. They are heavier than camping cots, typically 15 to 25 kg, but the trade-off is a sleeping surface that feels much closer to a regular bed.
Rollaway beds work best for indoor guest use where comfort is the priority and you have a closet or storage room to keep them in. They are not practical for camping or outdoor use.
Military-Style Folding Cots
These cots use a taut fabric deck stretched across a collapsible metal frame. They were originally designed for field use, so they prioritise durability and portability over cushioning. On their own, the fabric deck can feel firm and somewhat unforgiving. Adding a foam mattress pad transforms them into a surprisingly decent sleeping surface.
Military-style cots are a good choice if you need something that sets up quickly, handles rough use, and stores in a compact space. Many camping and outdoor enthusiasts prefer this style because it packs down small enough to fit in a car boot.
Tri-Fold Cots
Tri-fold cots collapse into three sections rather than folding flat. The mattress stays attached to the frame, so there is nothing to assemble. You unfold it, and it is ready. The downside is that tri-fold designs tend to be bulkier when stored and the mattresses are often thinner because they need to fold without cracking or deforming.
These work well for situations where you value convenience above all else. If you want a cot that goes from closet to bedroom in under 30 seconds with zero assembly, a tri-fold is hard to beat.
Camping Cots
Camping cots are the lightest and most portable option. They use lightweight aluminium frames and pack into carrying bags. Most do not include a mattress, so you will need to add a sleeping pad or thin foam mattress separately. Weight capacities tend to be lower than rollaway beds, though heavy-duty camping cots rated for 200 kg or more do exist.
| Cot Type | Typical Weight | Mattress Included | Best For | Price Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rollaway bed | 15 to 25 kg | Yes (10 to 15 cm) | Indoor guest use | $150 to $350 |
| Military-style cot | 7 to 12 kg | No (add separately) | Camping, rugged use | $80 to $200 |
| Tri-fold cot | 10 to 18 kg | Yes (5 to 8 cm) | Quick setup, occasional use | $100 to $250 |
| Camping cot | 3 to 8 kg | No (add separately) | Outdoor, travel | $60 to $180 |
Brad, Owner (since 1987): "People often underestimate how much cot type matters. I have had customers buy a camping cot for their guest room and wonder why their mother-in-law was not impressed. If the cot is for indoor guests, spend a little more on a rollaway with a proper mattress. Your guests will actually want to come back."
Choosing the Right Mattress for Your Cot
The mattress is what separates a tolerable night on a folding cot from a genuinely good one. A bare cot frame with just a fabric deck and a blanket is nobody's idea of hospitality. The mattress you pair with your cot determines pressure relief, spinal alignment, and whether your guest wakes up rested or sore.
Foam Types for Cot Mattresses
Most cot mattresses use one of three foam types, and each has distinct advantages.
Polyurethane foam is the most common and most affordable. It provides adequate support for occasional use and holds up well to repeated folding. The trade-off is that lower-density polyurethane foam can compress permanently over time, losing its cushioning ability. Look for a density of at least 1.5 lbs per cubic foot for a cot mattress that will last more than a season.
Memory foam conforms to the sleeper's body shape, providing excellent pressure relief at the shoulders and hips. It works well for side sleepers and for guests with joint pain. The downside is heat retention. Memory foam traps body heat, which can make sleeping uncomfortable in warm rooms or during Ontario summers. A memory foam cot mattress with a gel-infused layer or open-cell structure helps mitigate this.
Latex foam offers the best combination of support, durability, and temperature regulation. It is naturally breathable, resilient, and resistant to dust mites. Latex cot mattresses cost more than polyurethane or memory foam options, but they last significantly longer. If you host guests frequently, the investment pays for itself.
Cot Mattress Thickness Guide
- 5 cm (2 inches): Minimum for occasional use. Adequate for children or lightweight sleepers. Not recommended for guests over 70 kg.
- 7.5 cm (3 inches): Good balance of comfort and foldability. Suitable for most adults for one to three nights.
- 10 cm (4 inches): Comfortable for extended stays. Works well for side sleepers who need more cushioning at the hip and shoulder.
- 12.5 cm (5 inches): Maximum practical thickness for a folding cot. Approaches the comfort level of a regular mattress. Heavier and harder to fold, but excellent for frequent use.
Mattress Size Compatibility
Cot mattresses do not follow standard bed sizing. A "twin" cot mattress is usually narrower than a standard twin mattress. Before buying a mattress separately, measure the sleeping surface of your cot frame. Most folding cots have sleeping surfaces between 63 cm and 76 cm wide and 183 cm to 193 cm long. A standard twin mattress (96.5 cm wide) will hang over the edges of most cots, creating an unstable and uncomfortable sleeping surface.
If you already own a cot frame and need a replacement mattress, look for mattresses specifically labelled for cot use. Custom-cut foam is another option. Several Canadian foam suppliers will cut a mattress pad to your exact dimensions for a reasonable price.
Guest Hosting in Brantford and Surrounding Areas
With Brantford's growing population and its location between Hamilton, Kitchener, and Cambridge, hosting overnight visitors has become more common. Families in Paris, St. George, Cainsville, and Mount Pleasant often need flexible sleeping solutions for holiday gatherings. A well-chosen folding cot with mattress means you can host comfortably without converting your home office or crafting room into a permanent guest bedroom.
Weight Capacity and Frame Materials
Frame construction determines how much weight a folding cot can safely support, how long it will last, and how steady it feels while you sleep. This is not a detail to overlook. A cot that wobbles or creaks every time the sleeper shifts position is a cot that nobody wants to sleep on twice.
Steel Frames
Steel is the strongest and most durable frame material for folding cots. Heavy-gauge steel tubing (typically 18 to 22 gauge) provides excellent weight capacity, often 135 kg to 250 kg depending on the design. Steel frames are heavier than aluminium, which makes them less ideal for camping but perfectly suited for indoor guest use where the cot stays in one location most of the time.
Look for powder-coated steel frames. The coating prevents rust and corrosion, which matters if you store the cot in a basement or garage where humidity fluctuates. Bare steel frames will eventually develop rust spots, especially in Ontario's humid summers.
Aluminium Frames
Aluminium frames weigh roughly 40% less than comparable steel frames. This makes them the preferred choice for camping cots and any situation where you need to carry the cot a significant distance. The trade-off is lower weight capacity. Most aluminium cots are rated for 100 kg to 150 kg, though premium models can handle more.
Aluminium does not rust, which gives it an advantage in outdoor and high-humidity storage environments. However, aluminium frames are more prone to bending under sustained heavy loads. If the sleeper exceeds the rated capacity, aluminium is less forgiving than steel.
Understanding Weight Ratings
Weight ratings on folding cots represent the maximum static load the frame can handle without structural failure. They do not account for dynamic forces. When a person sits down on the edge of a cot, the momentary force on that section of the frame can exceed their body weight by 50% or more. A general rule is to choose a cot rated for at least 25% more than the heaviest person who will use it.
Pressure Distribution on Portable Sleep Surfaces
Research by Defloor (2000), published in the Journal of Clinical Nursing, examined how different support surfaces distribute body weight and affect pressure point formation. The study found that the interaction between mattress material and the support structure beneath it significantly influences pressure relief. For folding cots, this means the combination of frame tension and mattress density matters more than either factor alone. A firm frame with a soft mattress creates better pressure distribution than a saggy frame with a thick mattress.
| Frame Material | Typical Weight Capacity | Frame Weight | Rust Resistance | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heavy-gauge steel | 135 to 250 kg | 12 to 20 kg | Good (if powder-coated) | Indoor guest rooms |
| Aluminium alloy | 100 to 150 kg | 4 to 10 kg | Excellent | Camping, travel |
| Steel/aluminium hybrid | 115 to 200 kg | 8 to 14 kg | Good | Versatile indoor/outdoor |
How to Set Up a Folding Cot Properly
Setting up a folding cot seems self-explanatory until you find yourself standing in a guest room at 11 p.m. with a half-opened cot and no idea which leg goes where. A proper setup takes less than five minutes, but doing it correctly prevents the frame from collapsing, the mattress from sliding, and the legs from scratching your floor.
Step-by-Step Cot Setup
Step 1: Clear the Floor Space
Choose a flat, level surface at least 15 cm wider and 30 cm longer than the fully opened cot. Move furniture, rugs, and anything the cot legs could catch on. If you are setting up on hardwood or tile, place a non-slip mat or old towel beneath where the legs will sit.
Step 2: Unfold the Frame
Lay the folded cot on its side and release any locking clips or safety latches. Slowly open the frame, keeping your fingers away from the hinges. Most cots have a centre hinge that locks into position when fully extended. You should hear or feel a click when the frame is locked.
Step 3: Confirm All Legs Are Locked
Check every leg and cross-brace. Each support leg should be fully extended and locked in the open position. Push down firmly on the centre of the cot with both hands to confirm stability before adding the mattress. If any leg feels loose or wobbly, fold the cot back up and re-open it. Partially engaged locks are the most common cause of cot collapses.
Step 4: Place the Mattress
Centre the mattress on the cot frame. It should sit flat with no overhang on any side. If the mattress is slightly smaller than the frame, position it so the head end is flush with the frame edge. Use a fitted sheet that wraps under the mattress and around the frame edges to prevent sliding during the night.
Step 5: Add Bedding and Test
Add a fitted sheet, flat sheet, and pillow. Sit on the cot yourself before your guest arrives. Check for any wobble, listen for creaks, and confirm the mattress stays in place when you shift your weight from side to side. Five seconds of testing saves a midnight cot failure.
Prevent Floor Damage From Cot Legs
Folding cot legs can scratch hardwood, dent vinyl, and snag carpet fibres. Place adhesive felt pads on each leg foot before the first use. For extra protection on delicate flooring, slide a piece of thin plywood or a rubber mat under the entire cot. This also prevents the legs from sinking into thick carpet, which can make the cot feel uneven.
Folding Cot vs. Air Mattress vs. Futon
Every guest sleeping solution has its place. The question is not which one is objectively best, but which one fits your specific situation. Here is an honest comparison.
Folding Cot With Mattress
A folding cot with mattress provides consistent support night after night. There is no inflation required, no risk of punctures, and no gradual sag as the night goes on. The elevated sleeping surface makes it easier for older guests and anyone with mobility issues to get in and out of bed. Storage is the main drawback. Even folded, a cot with mattress takes up significant closet space.
Air Mattress
Air mattresses win on storage. Deflated, they roll up to the size of a sleeping bag. They are also the most affordable option, with decent queen-size air beds available for under $100. The problems are well-documented, though. Most air mattresses lose pressure overnight, especially in cold rooms where the air inside contracts. The sleeping surface can feel unstable, and two people sharing an air mattress will notice every movement the other person makes. For occasional one-night stays, an air mattress is fine. For anything longer, your guests deserve better.
Futon
Futons serve double duty as seating and sleeping surfaces. This makes them ideal for apartments, studios, and rooms where space is permanently limited. The downside is that most futons are not particularly comfortable for sleeping. The mattress tends to be thin, the folding mechanism creates a ridge in the middle, and the frame sits low to the ground. Premium futons with 15 cm or thicker mattresses solve some of these problems but cost as much as a budget bed frame and mattress set.
| Feature | Folding Cot | Air Mattress | Futon |
|---|---|---|---|
| Setup time | 2 to 5 minutes | 5 to 15 minutes | 30 seconds |
| Comfort (1 to 10) | 6 to 8 | 4 to 6 | 5 to 7 |
| Storage size | Large | Small | N/A (stays out) |
| Durability | 5 to 15 years | 1 to 3 years | 5 to 10 years |
| Price range | $80 to $350 | $40 to $200 | $200 to $800 |
| Elevation off floor | 30 to 50 cm | 15 to 45 cm | 20 to 40 cm |
| Double duty use | No | No | Yes (seating) |
Dorothy, Sleep Specialist: "I always tell people to think about who is sleeping on it and for how long. A 25-year-old nephew crashing for one night? An air mattress is perfectly fine. Your parents visiting for a week? Get a proper rollaway cot with a decent mattress. The mattress quality matters more than the frame in most cases. You can always add a mattress topper to improve a thin cot mattress."
How to Make a Folding Cot More Comfortable
Even a basic folding cot can feel surprisingly comfortable with a few smart additions. You do not need to spend a fortune. Small upgrades make a measurable difference.
Add a Mattress Topper
A 5 cm memory foam or latex mattress topper placed on top of a thin cot mattress dramatically improves comfort. Cut the topper to match the cot dimensions if standard sizes are too wide. This is the single most effective upgrade you can make to any folding cot setup.
Use a Mattress Protector
A waterproof mattress protector serves double duty on a cot. It protects the mattress from spills and sweat, extending its lifespan. It also adds a thin layer of cushioning and, if you choose one with a textured underside, helps prevent the mattress from sliding on the cot frame.
Choose the Right Pillow
Cot mattresses tend to be firmer and thinner than regular mattresses, which affects pillow selection. A thicker pillow helps compensate for the reduced cushioning, keeping the neck aligned with the spine. Side sleepers on a folding cot should use a pillow at least 12 cm thick. Back sleepers can get away with something thinner. Check out our guide to choosing the right pillow for more details.
Control Temperature
The gap between a folding cot and the floor promotes airflow, which is great in summer but can feel cold in winter. During colder months, place a blanket or thermal layer between the cot fabric and the mattress to insulate from below. In summer, the natural ventilation is one of a cot's biggest advantages over floor-level sleeping surfaces.
Temperature and Sleep Quality on Portable Surfaces
Okamoto-Mizuno and Mizuno (2012), in their review published in the Journal of Physiological Anthropology, concluded that thermal environment is one of the most significant factors affecting sleep quality. Heat exposure increases wakefulness and decreases slow-wave sleep and REM sleep. The elevated design of a folding cot naturally aids thermoregulation by allowing air to circulate beneath the sleeper, something that floor-level air mattresses and futons cannot replicate.
Special Use Cases for Folding Cots
Camping and Outdoor Use
A folding cot with mattress elevates you above uneven ground, rocks, roots, and moisture. This matters more than most campers realise until they have spent a night on wet ground. For camping, choose a cot with aluminium frame for weight savings, and pair it with a self-inflating sleeping pad rather than a foam mattress. Self-inflating pads pack smaller and provide decent insulation from cold air beneath the cot.
Emergency Preparedness
Emergency shelters and disaster relief organisations rely on folding cots for a reason. They set up fast, stack for storage, and provide a hygienic sleeping surface off the floor. If you are building an emergency preparedness kit for your household, a folding cot with a basic foam mattress is a practical inclusion. It takes up more space than a sleeping bag, but the comfort difference during an extended power outage or home displacement is significant.
Home Office and Multi-Use Rooms
The modern home rarely has the luxury of a dedicated guest room. A folding cot with mattress lets you convert your home office, craft room, or exercise space into a temporary bedroom in minutes. When the guests leave, the cot folds up and the room returns to its primary purpose. This is particularly relevant for homeowners in Brantford and the surrounding area, where housing prices have pushed many families into homes where every square metre needs to earn its keep.
Children and Sleepovers
Folding cots sized for children (typically 60 cm wide and 150 cm long) are a popular alternative to sleeping bags for sleepovers. They keep kids off the floor, provide better support than a pile of blankets, and make the experience feel more like a "real" bed. Most children's cots are rated for 45 to 70 kg, which covers kids up to about age 12 comfortably. For older children and teenagers, use an adult-sized cot. See our guide to kids' sleep solutions for more age-specific recommendations.
What to Look for When Buying a Folding Cot With Mattress
Shopping for a folding cot is not complicated, but a few details separate a purchase you will be happy with from one that ends up in the garage sale pile.
Buying Checklist
- Weight capacity: Choose a cot rated for at least 25% more than the heaviest expected sleeper. If multiple people might use it, buy for the heaviest one.
- Mattress thickness: 7.5 cm minimum for adults. 10 cm or more for regular use or side sleepers.
- Frame locking mechanism: Test that all joints lock securely. Spring-loaded auto-locks are safer and more convenient than manual pin locks.
- Folded dimensions: Measure your storage space before buying. A 193 cm cot that folds in half is still 96 cm long.
- Fabric deck quality: 600D polyester or canvas resists sagging better than thinner materials. The deck supports the mattress, so deck quality directly affects sleep comfort.
- Leg caps or feet: Rubber or plastic caps protect flooring. Missing or hard plastic caps will scratch hardwood.
- Warranty: A manufacturer warranty of at least one year on the frame indicates confidence in the product. Mattress warranties vary widely.
Maintenance, Care, and Storage Tips
A folding cot with mattress can last 10 years or more with basic maintenance. Neglect it, and you will be shopping for a replacement in two seasons.
Cleaning the Frame
Wipe down the frame with a damp cloth after each use. Pay attention to the hinges and locking mechanisms, where dust and grit accumulate. A light spray of silicone lubricant on the hinges once or twice a year keeps the folding action smooth and prevents squeaking. Never use WD-40 on cot hinges. It attracts dust and gums up the mechanism over time.
Cleaning the Mattress
Vacuum the cot mattress before storing it. Spot-clean stains with a mixture of mild dish soap and warm water. Do not saturate foam mattresses with liquid. Foam absorbs water and takes days to dry completely, creating conditions for mould growth. If the mattress has a removable cover, unzip it and wash it according to the care label.
Storage Best Practices
Store the folded cot upright in a dry location. Basements work if they are not damp. If moisture is a concern, wrap the mattress in a breathable cotton cover or a fitted sheet. Do not use plastic wrap or garbage bags, which trap moisture and promote mildew. Store the cot away from direct sunlight, which degrades fabric and foam over time.
If storing for an extended period (several months or more), stand the mattress on edge rather than leaving it compressed inside the folded cot. Foam that stays compressed for months develops permanent indentations. A mattress stored on edge maintains its shape and bounces back to full thickness when laid flat again.
Quick Refresh Before Guest Arrivals
When you pull the cot out of storage for incoming guests, unfold it and lay the mattress flat at least 24 hours before the visit. This gives compressed foam time to expand back to its full thickness and lets any musty storage smell dissipate. A quick wipe of the frame with a disinfecting cloth and fresh sheets complete the refresh.
Price Ranges and What You Get at Each Level
Understanding what to expect at each price point helps you avoid overpaying for features you do not need and underpaying for quality that matters.
| Price Range | What You Get | Who It Is For |
|---|---|---|
| $60 to $100 | Basic camping cot, thin or no mattress, aluminium frame, 100 kg capacity | Occasional camping, emergency backup |
| $100 to $200 | Mid-range cot with 7.5 cm foam mattress, steel frame, 135 kg capacity | Regular guest hosting, students |
| $200 to $350 | Premium rollaway with 10 to 15 cm mattress, spring support, 180+ kg capacity, wheels | Frequent guests, longer stays, seniors |
In our experience at Mattress Miracle, most families hosting occasional guests are best served in the $100 to $200 range. This gets you a cot that is comfortable enough for a three-night visit without breaking the budget. If you host frequently or have guests who stay a week or more, the premium range delivers noticeably better sleep quality.
Pairing Your Cot With Proper Bedding
Bedding choices affect cot comfort more than most people expect. The wrong sheets and pillows can make even a good cot feel mediocre.
Fitted sheets designed for standard mattresses are usually too large for cot mattresses. They bunch up, pull loose during the night, and create uncomfortable ridges. Look for sheets specifically sized for cot mattresses, or use deep-pocket twin sheets and tuck the excess fabric tightly beneath the mattress. Hospital corners work particularly well on cot mattresses because the thin profile lets you create a tight, secure tuck.
Blankets and duvets should be chosen based on the season. A folding cot's elevated design means cold air circulates beneath the sleeper. In winter, a fleece blanket or down duvet keeps the warmth in. In summer, a lightweight cotton blanket or just a flat sheet is usually sufficient, as the airflow beneath the cot provides natural cooling.
For comprehensive guidance on mattress care and accessories, our mattress protector guide covers everything from waterproofing to temperature regulation.
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We are a family-owned mattress store in Brantford, helping our community sleep better since 1987. Come try mattresses in person and get honest, no-pressure advice.
441 1/2 West Street, Brantford, Ontario
Call 519-770-0001Frequently Asked Questions
What thickness of mattress is best for a folding cot?
For most folding cots, a mattress between 7.5 cm and 12.5 cm (3 to 5 inches) thick provides the best balance of comfort and portability. Thinner mattresses fold more easily and keep the overall weight manageable, while thicker options offer better pressure relief for side sleepers and heavier guests.
Can a folding cot with mattress support a heavy person?
Yes. Many heavy-duty folding cots are rated for 225 kg (500 lbs) or more, with reinforced steel frames and wider sleeping surfaces. The key is checking the manufacturer's weight rating before purchase. A thicker, higher-density foam mattress also helps distribute weight more evenly across the frame.
How do I stop a folding cot mattress from sliding?
Use a fitted sheet that wraps snugly around both the mattress and cot frame, or place a non-slip rug pad between the mattress and cot surface. Some cots include fabric side rails or mattress straps specifically designed to hold the pad in place. A mattress protector with a grippy underside also works well.
Is a folding cot better than an air mattress for overnight guests?
A folding cot with mattress generally offers more consistent support than an air mattress, which can deflate overnight and sag in the middle. Cots keep sleepers elevated off the floor, which helps with temperature regulation and makes getting in and out of bed easier for older guests. Air mattresses take up less storage space when deflated, so the right choice depends on your priorities.
Does Mattress Miracle in Brantford sell folding cots?
Mattress Miracle carries a curated selection of guest sleeping solutions including portable sleep surfaces and mattress accessories. For the current stock of folding cots and compatible mattresses, call Brad directly at (519) 770-0001 or visit the showroom at 441 1/2 West Street in Brantford. The team can also recommend mattress toppers and protectors to improve any cot setup.
Sources
- Okamoto-Mizuno, K. & Mizuno, K. (2012). Effects of thermal environment on sleep and circadian rhythm. Journal of Physiological Anthropology, 31(1), 14. doi.org/10.1186/1880-6805-31-14
- Defloor, T. (2000). The effect of position and mattress on interface pressure. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 9(3), 397-405. doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2702.2000.00367.x
- Jacobson, B.H., et al. (2008). Effect of prescribed sleep surfaces on back pain and sleep quality in patients with low back pain. Journal of Chiropractic Medicine, 7(1), 1-8. doi.org/10.1016/j.jcme.2007.11.003
- Krauchi, K. (2007). The thermophysiological cascade leading to sleep initiation in relation to phase of entrainment. Sleep Medicine Reviews, 11(6), 439-451. doi.org/10.1016/j.smrv.2007.07.001
- Gordon, S.J., et al. (2009). Pillow use: The behaviour of cervical pain, sleep quality and pillow comfort in side sleepers. Manual Therapy, 14(6), 671-678. doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2009.02.006
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Mattress Miracle
441 1/2 West Street, Brantford
Phone: (519) 770-0001
Hours: Mon-Wed 10-6, Thu-Fri 10-7, Sat 10-5, Sun 12-4
Looking for the right folding cot with mattress for your guest room, cottage, or camping trips? Visit us in Brantford and try different mattress thicknesses and toppers in person. Brad and the team can help you find the combination that keeps your guests comfortable without taking over your spare room permanently.
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We are located at 441½ West Street in downtown Brantford. Free parking available. Our team does not work on commission, so you get honest advice based on your needs.
Mattress Miracle , 441½ West Street, Brantford, ON · (519) 770-0001
Hours: Monday–Wednesday 10am–6pm, Thursday–Friday 10am–7pm, Saturday 10am–5pm, Sunday 12pm–4pm.