Best Adjustable Bed Bases (2026)
What are the best adjustable bed bases in 2026?
TL;DR
Top pick: Saatva Adjustable Base Plus ($1,599 queen) — wall-hugging design, 3-speed targeted massage, under-bed lighting, app control, and a 25-year warranty with free white-glove delivery.
Best value: Nectar Premier Adjustable Base ($749 queen) — its price roughly halved this year; 3 massage settings, zero-gravity, anti-snore, 4 USB ports, and it is the one mattress-brand base you can buy on Amazon today.
Best budget: Best Choice Products Adjustable Bed Frame ($379 queen) — wireless remote, wave/pulse/constant massage, zero-gravity, USB, and an under-bed nightlight.
[src1, src2]
Summary
Adjustable bed bases have moved from a luxury niche to a mainstream sleep upgrade in 2026, and mid-market pricing collapsed over the first half of the year: capable queen bases now span $379 to about $2,700 [src1, src2]. The Saatva Adjustable Base Plus ($1,599 queen) is the consensus premium pick across Sleep Foundation, AARP, and Mattress Clarity for its wall-hugging design, three-speed targeted massage (head, legs, or whole body), under-bed lighting, mobile-app control, remote flashlight, and an industry-leading 25-year warranty with free white-glove delivery [src1, src3, src4]. For technology, Tempur-Pedic has retired the TEMPUR-Ergo Extend Smart Base and now sells the TEMPUR-Ergo ProSmart Base (~$2,499-$2,699 queen) in its place — it keeps Sleeptracker-AI sleep tracking, automatic snore response, and multi-zone massage, and remains the priciest pick here [src1, src2, src8].
The biggest 2026 story is value. The Nectar Premier Adjustable Base and the near-identical DreamCloud Premier Adjustable Base (both sister brands under Resident) have each fallen to $749 — roughly half their 2025 pricing — and now deliver zoned massage, zero-gravity, anti-snore, and four USB ports for less than many entry frames cost two years ago [src1, src3, src4]. Nectar is also the only one of the two listed on Amazon, which makes it the practical value pick. Just behind them, the Helix Adjustable Base and Brooklyn Bedding Ascension Luxe both land at $899 queen [src1, src4]. At the entry level, the Amazon-native Best Choice Products frame ($379, down from ~$450) covers the core functions — head/foot incline, zero-gravity, wave/pulse/constant massage, wireless remote, USB, and an under-bed nightlight — and was among the models Consumer Reports tested [src2]. Note that 8 of the 10 bases here are direct-to-consumer only, so their buy links resolve to the brand's official product page rather than a marketplace listing [src1, src4].
Top 10 Models Compared
| Model | Price (Queen) | Sold via | Massage | Zero-Gravity | Lighting | App/Tech | Best For | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saatva Adjustable Base Plus | $1,599 | Saatva direct | 3-speed targeted | Yes | Under-bed | App + flashlight | Best overall / luxury | Check price |
| Tempur-Pedic TEMPUR-Ergo ProSmart Base | ~$2,499-2,699 | Tempur-Pedic direct | 4-zone | Yes | Under-bed | Sleeptracker-AI + snore response | Best for back pain / tech | Check price |
| Nectar Premier Adjustable Base | $749 | Amazon | 3-intensity | Yes | Under-bed | Anti-snore, 4 USB ports | Best value / best split king | Check price |
| DreamCloud Premier Adjustable Base | $749 | DreamCloud direct | Zoned 3-speed | Yes | Under-bed | Quiet motor, 4 USB, Bluetooth app | Best value (direct) | Check price |
| Helix Adjustable Base | $899 | Helix direct | 3-intensity | Yes | Under-bed | 3 presets, USB, 10-yr warranty | Best budget mattress-brand | Check price |
| Brooklyn Bedding Ascension Luxe | $899 | Brooklyn Bedding direct | Yes | Yes | — | 850-lb capacity, 2 USB | Best for heavy sleepers | Check price |
| Puffy Adjustable Base | ~$1,199-1,499 | Puffy direct | Dual-zone | Yes | Under-bed | Adjustable legs, 365-night trial | Best pressure relief | Check price |
| Nolah LiftEase Adjustable Base | $1,754 (list $2,699) | Nolah direct | Yes | Yes | Under-bed | Voice control, lift/tilt assist | Best for seniors | Check price |
| Bear Adjustable Flex Bed | $2,398 | Bear direct | Yes | Yes | — | Quiet motor, legs to 12", remote flashlight | Premium non-split | Check price |
| Best Choice Products Adjustable Bed Frame | $379 | Amazon | Wave/pulse/constant | Yes | Under-bed nightlight | Wireless remote, USB, 750-lb cap | Best budget (Amazon) | Check price |
Best for Each Use Case
Best Overall / Luxury: Saatva Adjustable Base Plus ($1,599) — Check price
The top pick across Sleep Foundation, AARP, and Mattress Clarity. A wall-hugging design keeps your nightstand in reach as the head rises, and it pairs three-speed targeted massage (head, legs, or whole body) with under-bed lighting, mobile-app control, and a remote flashlight. The standout is a 25-year warranty plus free white-glove delivery and setup — most competitors charge extra or don't offer it. Sold direct by Saatva only. [src1, src3, src4]
Best Value: Nectar Premier Adjustable Base ($749) — Check price
The standout buy of 2026. Nectar's Premier base has fallen to $749 for a queen — roughly half its 2025 price — while keeping three massage intensities, zero-gravity, an anti-snore preset, head and foot incline, four USB ports, under-bed lighting, and a wireless remote with memory positions. It is also the only mattress-brand base in this comparison that is actually stocked on Amazon, so you can buy it today without going through a DTC checkout. In split king (two Twin XL bases) each partner adjusts independently, which makes it the couples pick as well. [src1, src3, src6]
Best for Back Pain / Most Advanced Tech: Tempur-Pedic TEMPUR-Ergo ProSmart Base (~$2,499-2,699) — Check price
The most technology-loaded base in the comparison, and Tempur-Pedic's current flagship now that the TEMPUR-Ergo Extend Smart Base has been retired from its lineup. Sleeptracker-AI sensors track breathing and heart rate and feed nightly analytics and sleep coaching to an app, automatic snore response raises your head about 12 degrees when it detects snoring, and four-zone Wave Form massage plus added lumbar support target lower-back pain. The priciest pick, but the choice when sleep tracking and back-pain support matter most. [src1, src2, src8]
Best Value (Direct): DreamCloud Premier Adjustable Base ($749) — Check price
AARP's and Mattress Clarity's value standout, and now price-matched to its Nectar sibling at $749. A near-silent motor, zoned three-speed massage, zero-gravity preset, memory positions, four USB ports, Bluetooth app control, under-bed LED lighting, and tool-free assembly with four leg heights. Functionally near-identical to the Nectar Premier — pick whichever is cheaper the day you buy; DreamCloud sells direct only. [src3, src4]
Best Budget (Mattress-Brand): Helix Adjustable Base ($899) — Check price
Still the cheap way into a brand-name base, now $899 for a queen. It includes memory presets, three massage intensities, head and foot elevation, zero-gravity, USB charging, stackable legs, and tool-free assembly, backed by a tiered warranty running to 10 years on components. Brooklyn Bedding's Ascension Luxe matches it at $899 with a higher 850-lb weight capacity. [src1, src3]
Best for Heavy Sleepers: Brooklyn Bedding Ascension Luxe ($899) — Check price
An 850-lb weight capacity — the highest here — at a mid-budget price. Zero-clearance, platform-ready design with six metal legs, five-minute tool-free assembly, wireless remote with built-in flashlight, TV/zero-gravity/anti-snore/lounge presets, two USB ports, and a 10-year limited parts warranty. [src4]
Best for Seniors: Nolah LiftEase Adjustable Base ($1,754, list $2,699) — Check price
NCOA and Sleep Foundation highlight voice control as the senior-friendly differentiator — no fumbling with a remote. It also raises, lowers, or tilts the whole base to assist getting in and out of bed, and adds massage, under-bed lighting, USB charging, and a zero-gravity preset. White-glove delivery with in-home setup is available. (Always consult a healthcare provider for medical needs.) [src5, src7]
Best Pressure Relief: Puffy Adjustable Base (~$1,199-1,499) — Check price
Sleep Foundation's pressure-relief pick, now sold as the Puffy Serenity Adjustable Base. Dual-zone three-speed massage, a zero-gravity preset that distributes weight evenly, adjustable leg heights, under-bed LED lighting, USB charging, and a universal headboard bracket — backed by a 365-night trial and a lifetime warranty. [src1]
Head-to-Head Comparisons
Saatva Adjustable Base Plus vs Tempur-Pedic TEMPUR-Ergo ProSmart Base
Both are premium. Saatva wins on warranty (25 years vs Tempur-Pedic's shorter coverage), free white-glove delivery, and price ($1,599 vs roughly $2,499-2,699 — about $1,000 less). The ProSmart wins on technology — Sleeptracker-AI sleep tracking, automatic snore response, and four-zone massage that Saatva lacks. [src1, src2, src8]
Pick Saatva Adjustable Base Plus if: you want the best overall value-to-luxury ratio, the longest warranty, and free setup.
Pick TEMPUR-Ergo ProSmart if: sleep data, automatic snore response, and lumbar support justify a ~$1,000 premium.
Nectar Premier vs DreamCloud Premier Adjustable Base
The closest call in this comparison: both are Resident-owned sister brands, both are $749 for a queen, and both offer zoned massage, zero-gravity, anti-snore, four USB ports, and under-bed lighting. The tiebreaker is where you buy — Nectar is stocked on Amazon, while DreamCloud sells direct only (which does mean DreamCloud runs its own promos). [src1, src3, src4]
Pick Nectar Premier if: you want Amazon delivery, returns, and checkout rather than a DTC order.
Pick DreamCloud Premier if: you're already buying a DreamCloud mattress and can bundle, or its direct promo beats $749.
Helix Adjustable Base vs Brooklyn Bedding Ascension Luxe
Both are $899 queen and both are the sensible mattress-brand step up from a $379 Amazon frame. Helix has the simpler, better-documented feature set (three massage intensities, memory presets, under-bed lighting). Brooklyn Bedding counters with an 850-lb weight capacity — the highest here — a zero-clearance platform-ready frame, and a remote flashlight. [src1, src3, src4]
Pick Helix Adjustable Base if: you want under-bed lighting and the simplest setup at $899.
Pick Brooklyn Bedding Ascension Luxe if: combined sleeper weight is high, or you need a zero-clearance/platform-ready base.
Saatva Adjustable Base Plus vs Best Choice Products Adjustable Bed Frame
This is the luxury-vs-budget decision. The Best Choice Products frame ($379 on Amazon) covers the core functions — head/foot incline, zero-gravity, massage, wireless remote, USB, nightlight — at less than a quarter of Saatva's price. Saatva adds app control, wall-hugging glide, targeted three-zone massage, and a 25-year warranty vs the budget frame's basic coverage. [src1, src2]
Pick Best Choice Products if: you want the essential adjustable-base experience for under $400 and buy on Amazon today.
Pick Saatva Adjustable Base Plus if: you want premium build, app features, and long-term warranty protection.
Nectar Premier (Split King) vs Bear Adjustable Flex Bed
Both suit couples, but the price gap flipped this year. Nectar's split king gives each partner a fully independent base — essential when partners want different positions — and now undercuts Bear by a wide margin. Bear is a non-split base (the couple moves together) and rose to $2,398 for a queen, though it keeps a quiet motor, legs adjustable to 12 inches, and a remote flashlight. [src1, src3]
Pick Nectar Premier Split King if: you and your partner need independent head/foot positions — and want to spend far less.
Pick Bear Adjustable Flex Bed if: you're committed to the Bear ecosystem and want its build quality and tall, customizable legs.
Decision Logic
If budget < $500
→ Best Choice Products Adjustable Bed Frame ($379). The cheapest Amazon-native option with head/foot incline, zero-gravity, massage, wireless remote, USB, and nightlight — 750-lb capacity and compatible with foam, latex, and hybrid mattresses. [src2]
If budget is $500-$1,000 (the sweet spot in 2026)
→ Nectar Premier Adjustable Base ($749 on Amazon) or DreamCloud Premier ($749 direct). Both roughly halved in price this year and now deliver zoned massage, zero-gravity, anti-snore, and 4 USB ports. Helix and Brooklyn Bedding Ascension Luxe are the $899 alternatives. [src1, src3, src4]
If primary goal is back pain or acid reflux relief
→ Prioritize zero-gravity and lumbar support. Tempur-Pedic TEMPUR-Ergo ProSmart Base for Sleeptracker-AI, snore response, and lumbar support, or Saatva Adjustable Base Plus ($1,599) for targeted massage plus zero-gravity at roughly $1,000 less. [src1, src2, src8]
If you are a couple who wants independent control
→ Choose a Split King: the Nectar Premier Adjustable Base lets each Twin XL side adjust independently, and is now the cheapest credible way to get there. A standard Queen/King moves as one unit. [src1, src6]
If the user is a senior or has limited mobility
→ Nolah LiftEase ($1,754) for voice control plus whole-base lift/tilt assist for getting in and out of bed, or Saatva Adjustable Base Plus for app control and free white-glove setup. Consult a physician for medical-grade needs. [src5, src7]
If combined sleeper weight is high (>500 lb)
→ Brooklyn Bedding Ascension Luxe ($899) — an 850-lb capacity, the highest in this comparison, on a zero-clearance platform-ready frame. [src4]
Default recommendation (unknown requirements)
→ Saatva Adjustable Base Plus ($1,599). Consensus best overall across Sleep Foundation, AARP, and Mattress Clarity, with the longest warranty and free setup. If price matters at all, the Nectar Premier at $749 is the safer default in 2026. [src1, src3, src4]
Key Market Trends (2026)
- Mid-market pricing collapsed in 2026: the Nectar and DreamCloud Premier bases both fell to $749 — roughly half their 2025 pricing — and Helix and Brooklyn Bedding now sit at $899. A full-featured mattress-brand base costs less today than a mid-tier one did two years ago. [src1, src3, src4]
- Adjustable bases have gone mainstream: rising demand for sleep customization and steadily falling prices have pushed adjustable bases from luxury-only into the mainstream, with capable models now starting near $379. [src1, src2]
- Feature stacking at low prices: full head/foot articulation, USB ports, three-speed massage, anti-snore, and zero-gravity — once flagship-only — are now standard at the $750-900 tier rather than the $1,500 tier. [src4]
- Smart tech is the last premium differentiator: with massage and zero-gravity now table stakes, sleep tracking, automatic snore response, and app coaching (Tempur-Pedic's Sleeptracker-AI, Saatva) are what the $1,600+ tier is actually selling. Tempur-Pedic consolidated its lineup this year, retiring the Ergo Extend Smart Base in favour of the ProSmart Base. [src1, src2, src8]
- DTC dominance: 8 of the 10 bases here are direct-to-consumer only (Saatva, DreamCloud, Helix, Puffy, Nolah, Bear, Brooklyn Bedding, Tempur-Pedic), while Amazon carries only the Nectar Premier and entry frames like Best Choice Products. Marketplace availability remains the exception, not the rule. [src2, src4]
- Split King for couples: independent-side control is the fastest-growing segment, with most premium brands now offering a split-king configuration. [src1, src6]
- Longer warranties and trials as differentiators: Saatva's 25-year warranty and Puffy's 365-night trial plus lifetime warranty show brands competing on long-term confidence, not just features. [src1, src3]
Important Caveats
- Prices are queen-size figures as of July 2026 and fluctuate heavily. Several moved sharply since the last revision: Nectar Premier and DreamCloud Premier both fell to $749 (from ~$1,400-1,500), Best Choice Products fell to $379, and the Bear Adjustable Flex Bed rose to $2,398. Re-check before buying.
- Tempur-Pedic has retired the TEMPUR-Ergo Extend Smart Base. Its Amazon listings are "currently unavailable" and it no longer appears in Tempur-Pedic's power-base lineup. The successor is the TEMPUR-Ergo ProSmart Base, which this card now covers; if you find Extend stock at a discount it is still a capable base, but expect no restock. [src8]
- Only the Nectar Premier and the Best Choice Products frame are sold on Amazon. The other eight bases are direct-to-consumer only, so their buy links go to the brand's official product page. Prices at DTC brands change with frequent promotions.
- Adjustable bases need a compatible flexible mattress (memory foam, latex, or flexible hybrid). Rigid innerspring mattresses will not flex and may void warranties.
- Split King means two independent Twin XL bases. A non-split Queen or King moves as a single unit — couples cannot set different positions.
- Assembly usually requires two people; bases weigh 137-228 lbs. Only Saatva includes free white-glove delivery and setup as standard.
- Massage, lighting, snore-response, and app features are comfort conveniences, not certified medical devices. For serious medical conditions, consult a physician or a durable-medical-equipment supplier rather than a consumer adjustable base. [src3, src7]