What is the Best Mattress for Sciatica in 2026?
Understanding Sciatica and Your Mattress
Sciatica is nerve pain that originates in the lower back and radiates down one or both legs, caused by compression or irritation of the sciatic nerve. Sciatica occurs when there is pressure, injury, or damage anywhere along the course of the sciatic nerve, which is the longest and widest nerve in the body. It is a symptom of an underlying medical issue affecting the spine or nearby muscles. The sciatic nerve provides sensation to the back of the thigh, the outer and back part of the lower leg, and the sole of the foot. Understanding the underlying nerve pathology, typical symptoms, and the role of the sciatic nerve in motor and sensory functions is essential for managing sciatica effectively.The common symptoms of sciatica include sharp, shooting pain, numbness, and tingling that runs along the path of the nerve—typically from your lower back through the hip and down the leg. Sciatica can severely impact the quality of life of those affected.So what does your mattress have to do with it?A mattress that lets your hips sink too deeply rotates the pelvis and misaligns the spine, which increases pressure on the sciatic nerve. Night after night, that adds up. A mattress that's too firm does the opposite: it doesn't cushion your pressure points, leaving your hips and lower back without the relief they need.That’s why experts recommend a medium to medium-firm mattress that cushions your pressure points while keeping your spine neutral.Causes of Sciatica
Sciatica pain develops when the sciatic nerve is compressed or irritated, often resulting in nerve pain that can range from mild discomfort to severe pain radiating down the leg. The most common underlying cause is a herniated lumbar disc, where the soft inner material of a spinal disc pushes out and presses on the nerve roots. Lumbar spinal stenosis—narrowing of the spinal canal in the lower back—can also pinch the sciatic nerve, leading to persistent nerve pain and discomfort. Other causes include spondylolisthesis, where one vertebra slips over another, as well as less common conditions like spinal tumors, epidural abscesses, or piriformis syndrome. In some cases, non-spinal issues such as diabetes or peripheral artery disease can also trigger sciatica symptoms. Because sciatica can have many different origins, understanding the specific underlying cause is essential for finding the most effective treatment and long-term relief.How to Choose the Right Mattress for Sciatica Pain Relief

- Know your sleep position: Side sleepers need more cushioning at the hips; back sleepers need firmer lumbar support.
- Look for pressure relief at the hips combined with lumbar support in the lower back.
- Choose medium to medium-firm firmness—this is the expert recommendation across the board.
- Prioritize a long trial period. Sciatica relief can take 4–6 weeks to fully assess, so you need time to know if a mattress is actually working.
- Replace mattresses over 6–8 years old. According to WebMD, a sagging mattress no longer provides the support needed to keep your spine aligned and that can make sciatica significantly worse.
Side Sleepers
Side sleeping is generally the most sciatica-friendly position—especially on the side that doesn't hurt. When your hips sink just enough into the mattress to keep your spine in a neutral line, pressure on the sciatic nerve is minimized.What you need: More cushioning at the hips to prevent the top hip from rotating the pelvis. The Endy Mattress (Medium-Firm) is built for this. Its 2" open-cell comfort foam layer cradles your hips and relieves pressure on the sciatic nerve without letting your spine fall out of alignment. For side sleepers who want an extra layer of cloud-like cushioning, the Endy Plush is worth exploring too.Back Sleepers
Back sleeping keeps the spine naturally aligned—as long as your mattress supports the lumbar curve. If it sags under your lower back, you lose that support and the sciatic nerve can become compressed.What you need: Firmer lumbar support to maintain the natural curve of the lower back. This is where the Endy Hybrid Mattress (Medium-Firm) really shines. Its zoned pocket coils are engineered to be firmer in the centre-third of the mattress, which is exactly where your lower back needs targeted support. This provides targeted lumbar support to maintain spinal alignment for sciatica sufferers.Stomach Sleepers
Stomach sleeping is generally not recommended for sciatica. This position hyperextends the lumbar spine, which can increase nerve compression over time. If you can't kick the habit, a firmer surface limits sinking and helps reduce the strain.Why Hybrid Mattresses Are the Expert Pick for Sciatica

- Endy Cooling Comfort Foam: Releases tension from your shoulders, hips, and back—the pressure points that tend to aggravate sciatic pain.
- Pressure-Relief Foam: Designed to ease pressure points and eliminate motion transfer, so a restless partner doesn't wake you mid-relief.
- Zoned Coil Support: High-carbon steel pocket coils that are firmer in the centre-third. This is the lumbar zone—engineered to maintain spinal alignment right where the sciatic nerve originates.
- High-Density Support Foam: The foundation that keeps your mattress perfectly firm and supportive for years. Canadian-made, so you know it's built to last.
The Endy Mattress: A Solid Option for Side Sleepers with Sciatica
Not everyone needs a hybrid. If you're a side or combination sleeper, the Endy Mattress (Medium-Firm) delivers serious pressure-point relief in an all-foam design. Here's what's inside:- Endy Cooling Comfort Foam: Responsive open-cell foam infused with cooling gel. It cradles your body to support deep sleep without trapping heat—because overheating is the last thing you need when you're already uncomfortable.
- Pressure-Relief Foam: Melts away tension in your back, hips, and shoulders while eliminating motion transfer.
- High-Density Support Foam: The base layer that guarantees consistent firmness and support. No sagging, no surprises.
Endy Mattress vs. Endy Hybrid: Which Is Right for Your Sciatica?
Still deciding? Here's a side-by-side look at how both mattresses stack up for sciatica-specific needs:Proudly Canadian and Built to Prove It

The 365-Night Trial
Most mattress companies give you around 100 nights to decide. We give you 365.According to AARP, sciatica symptoms can take 4–6 weeks to improve with the right support. That's before you factor in adjustment periods, varying sleep positions, and the time it takes your body to actually decompress. A 100-night trial barely gets you through the evaluation window.The Sleep Foundation notes that the industry standard trial is around 100–120 nights. Our 365-night trial is more than three times that because we're confident in our mattresses, and we want you to be too.If it's not working for you after a full year, we'll arrange a free pickup and full refund. No drama, no hoops.Each Endy Mattress also comes backed by a 15-year limited warranty (10 years without registration, 15 years when you register as an Endy VIP). It covers manufacturing defects, visible indentation greater than one inch, and foam splitting or cracking under normal use.
































































































