Quick Answer
There are 8 bedding fabrics worth knowing — but only 3 are worth buying for most sleepers. Long-staple cotton (percale or sateen weave) is the all-rounder; French flax linen wins for hot sleepers and 8-10 year value; mulberry silk is the luxury upgrade. The other 5 — bamboo viscose, Tencel/lyocell, microfibre, polyester, blends — are either greenwashed (bamboo), niche (Tencel), or actively worse (microfibre, polyester, blends). After 90 nights of side-by-side testing on Or & Zon fabrics, the ranking has not changed in 3 years.
Key Takeaways
- 3 fabrics dominate: cotton, linen, silk. These are the only fibres luxury hotels and GOTS-certified producers still use across full bedding lines.
- "Bamboo" sheets are almost always rayon/viscose. The bamboo plant is chemically dissolved into pulp; the FTC sued retailers in 2022 for marketing it as natural bamboo.
- Microfibre and polyester are the same fibre. Microfibre is polyester with thinner threads. Both pill, trap heat, and hold odour.
- Tencel/lyocell is the one closed-loop synthetic worth considering. The solvent recycling makes it the most sustainable of the cellulose-derived fibres.
- Thread count is mostly meaningless above 400. Long-staple cotton at 300 TC outperforms short-staple cotton at 800 TC.
- 5-star hotels almost exclusively use cotton percale at 300-400 TC. The "luxury" benchmark is not what most consumer marketing suggests.
Bedding fabric types and sheet fabric types — the quick guide
There are 8 main bedding fabric types (and sheet fabric types): cotton (percale and sateen weaves), linen, silk, Tencel/lyocell, bamboo viscose, microfibre, and polyester. Only three are worth buying for most sleepers: linen, organic cotton percale, and organic cotton sateen. The rest are either niche, greenwashed (bamboo), or worse on every metric (microfibre, polyester). Full 90-night tested ranking below.
The "types of bedding fabric" search is one of the most consequential a shopper will make, because the fibre choice locks in 5-10 years of nightly experience — and most articles list 12 fabrics without telling you which 3 actually matter.
This is the version we wish existed when we started Or & Zon: ranked, scored, and audited against the greenwashing claims you'll find on most "bamboo" or "microfibre" listings.

Stonewashed French flax linen — the highest-breathability fabric in our 90-night side-by-side test, and the only natural fibre with a 10-year lifespan when GOTS-certified.
The 8 bedding fabrics, ranked by what actually matters
We tested all 8 fabrics on identical bed setups across 90 nights, controlling for ambient temperature and washing routine. Scoring on 6 metrics that customer feedback shows are the actual decision drivers:
| Fabric | Breath. | Softness yr 5 | Pilling | Odour retention | Wash resilience | Cost/year | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| French flax linen (GOTS) | 10/10 | 10/10 | 10/10 | 9/10 | 10/10 | $22-32 | ⭐ 9.7 |
| Organic cotton percale | 9/10 | 8/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 | 10/10 | $18-28 | ⭐ 9.0 |
| Organic cotton sateen | 7/10 | 8/10 | 9/10 | 8/10 | 9/10 | $22-32 | ⭐ 8.2 |
| Mulberry silk satin | 6/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 | 9/10 | 5/10 | $60-130 | 7.6 |
| Tencel / lyocell | 7/10 | 6/10 | 7/10 | 7/10 | 7/10 | $28-40 | 6.8 |
| "Bamboo" (rayon) | 6/10 | 4/10 | 5/10 | 5/10 | 4/10 | $25-40 | 4.7 |
| Microfibre | 3/10 | 3/10 | 2/10 | 3/10 | 4/10 | $10-18 | 3.0 |
| Polyester | 2/10 | 3/10 | 2/10 | 2/10 | 4/10 | $10-15 | 2.7 |
The takeaway: three fabrics score above 8. The other five are either niche, greenwashed, or actively worse. We'll go through each in detail, then look at which 5-star hotels actually use.
1. French flax linen — the long-term winner
Made from the cellulose fibre of the flax plant, almost entirely grown in France and Belgium (which produce ~80% of the world's textile flax). When stonewashed and OEKO-TEX or GOTS certified, linen is the highest-scoring fabric across every metric except softness in year one.
| Property | Detail |
|---|---|
| Feel | Year 1: textured, slightly crisp. Year 3+: gets softer with every wash — most linen owners describe year 5 as "the best year." |
| Breathability | Highest of any bedding fibre — open weave + hollow fibre structure |
| Temperature regulation | Cool in summer, warm in winter — naturally thermoregulating |
| Best for | Hot sleepers, sensitive skin, long-term value buyers, hospitality |
| Drawbacks | Wrinkles freely (intentionally — it's the look). Higher upfront cost. |
| Real lifespan | 8-10 years with proper care |
2. Organic cotton percale — the all-rounder
Long-staple cotton in a 1-over-1 plain weave. Crisp, matte, the "hotel-fresh" feel most luxury hospitality uses on actual property. The most versatile fabric in bedding.
| Property | Detail |
|---|---|
| Feel | Crisp, cool to the touch, matte finish. Gets softer with each wash without losing structure. |
| Breathability | Very high — second only to linen |
| Best for | Year-round all-purpose use; warm and cool sleepers; people who want the hotel feel |
| Drawbacks | Wrinkles slightly more than sateen; some prefer the smoother feel of sateen |
| Real lifespan | 5-10 years |
3. Organic cotton sateen — the silky cotton
The same cotton fibre as percale, woven in a 4-over-1 satin weave structure. Lustrous, smooth, drapey. The honest version of "satin sheets" — cotton fibre with the silky look.
| Property | Detail |
|---|---|
| Feel | Smooth, lustrous, drapey. The "satin look" most shoppers actually want when they Google satin sheets. |
| Breathability | Good — lower than percale due to tighter weave, but still high relative to synthetic options |
| Best for | People who want the silky look without polyester; sensitive skin; hair-conscious sleepers |
| Drawbacks | Slightly warmer than percale; can snag on rough nails |
| Real lifespan | 5-8 years |

GOTS-certified organic cotton percale — the same crisp matte fabric most 5-star hotels source for their actual property sheeting.
4. Mulberry silk satin — the luxury option
The protein fibre produced by silkworms, woven into satin or charmeuse. Genuine quality starts around $200 per sheet. Anything sub-$50 labeled "silk" is almost certainly polyester satin.
| Property | Detail |
|---|---|
| Feel | Cool, ultra-smooth, fluid. The only fibre that consistently delivers a "cooling-to-the-touch" sensation. |
| Best for | Hair retention, sensitive skin, eczema sleepers, luxury experiences |
| Drawbacks | Expensive ($300-$800+ for a queen set), delicate (30°C hand-wash or dry-clean), shows water spotting |
| Real lifespan | 4-7 years with gentle care; 1-2 years if washed with regular detergent and tumble dried |
5. Tencel / lyocell — the closed-loop synthetic
A regenerated cellulose fibre made from eucalyptus or beech wood pulp using a closed-loop NMMO solvent process. Owned by Lenzing AG. The most environmentally responsible of the cellulose-derived fibres.
| Property | Detail |
|---|---|
| Feel | Smooth, lightly silky, slightly cooler than cotton in summer |
| Breathability | Moderate — better than polyester or rayon, lower than cotton |
| Best for | Environmentally conscious buyers; eczema sleepers (often softer than cotton year-one) |
| Drawbacks | Lower wash resilience than cotton; shows wear at the corners around year 3; not as durable |
| Real lifespan | 3-5 years |
6. "Bamboo" sheets — the greenwashing problem
This is the fabric category most worth understanding before you buy. Bamboo sheets are almost never bamboo in any meaningful sense. They are rayon or viscose made by chemically dissolving bamboo pulp using carbon disulfide and sodium hydroxide.
This is what to watch for in bamboo marketing:
| Bamboo claim | Reality |
|---|---|
| "100% bamboo" | Almost certainly rayon. True bamboo linen exists but is rare and expensive ($300+/set). |
| "Bamboo viscose" | Honest naming — this is rayon made from bamboo pulp. Bamboo plant origin only. |
| "Bamboo lyocell" | Closed-loop processed bamboo — the most environmentally responsible "bamboo" option but still rayon |
| "Natural bamboo sheets" | Misleading. The chemical pulping process is not natural — the FTC has sued retailers for this claim. |
| "Antibacterial bamboo" | The antibacterial property of the bamboo plant does not survive the rayon-making process. FTC banned this claim in 2010. |
If sustainability is your priority, Tencel/lyocell from FSC-certified eucalyptus is the more honest version of what "bamboo" claims to be.
7. Microfibre — polyester with smaller threads
Microfibre is polyester (sometimes nylon) made with fibres less than 1 denier — finer than silk threads. Marketed as a "premium upgrade" from regular polyester. It isn't — it's the same fibre with smaller threads.
| Property | Detail |
|---|---|
| Feel | Soft to the touch in week 1, plasticky and rough by week 30 |
| Breathability | Very poor — same fibre as polyester, just woven finer |
| Best for | Vacation rentals or guest beds (low cost, replaceable) |
| Drawbacks | Pills around 30 washes; traps heat; sheds microplastics into water systems; holds odour |
| Real lifespan | 1-2 years |
8. Polyester & cotton-polyester blends
The cheapest option. Petroleum-derived, woven fine or coarse. Cotton-polyester blends (typically 50/50 or 65/35) attempt to balance polyester's cheapness with cotton's breathability. The result is sheets that combine the worst of both: polyester's heat retention with cotton's wrinkle tendency.
| Property | Detail |
|---|---|
| Feel | Slick, plasticky; blends slightly softer but lose softness fast |
| Breathability | Very poor — polyester dominates the breathability profile even in 50/50 blends |
| Best for | Budget guest rooms; rental properties |
| Drawbacks | Traps heat; holds odour permanently; sheds microplastics; pills |
| Real lifespan | 1-3 years |
Why 5-star hotels (almost) always use cotton percale
This is the industry-edge insight that consumer bedding articles miss: luxury hotels have already done this comparison commercially, and they almost always choose long-staple cotton percale at 300-400 thread count. Not silk. Not bamboo. Not microfibre. Cotton percale.
The reasons, from conversations with our Portuguese manufacturing partner who supplies 4 and 5-star hotels:
- Wash resilience matters more than initial softness. Hotel sheets are washed 300+ times per year at 90°C with industrial detergents. Cotton percale handles this. Silk and bamboo rayon do not.
- The crisp matte finish reads as "luxury hotel" to the average guest. Silk feels too unfamiliar; sateen too residential; linen too rustic. Percale is the universal hotel signal.
- Long-staple cotton at 300 TC outperforms short-staple cotton at 800 TC. The thread-count race is a marketing convention, not a quality marker.
- Cost per night per sheet is lower than any alternative. A $200 cotton percale sheet lasting 5 years = $0.11/night. A $40 polyester sheet lasting 2 years = $0.055/night, but the guest experience is worse and the brand cost is higher.
If you want to replicate the 5-star hotel feel at home, the answer is not silk or bamboo — it's GOTS-certified long-staple cotton percale at 300-400 TC.
— Or & Zon —
The 3 fabrics worth buying — done honestly
GOTS-certified French flax linen, organic cotton percale, and organic cotton sateen. Woven in Portugal, made to last 5-10 years.
What our Portuguese mill taught us about why fibre origin matters more than thread count
When customers ask why two "long-staple cotton" sheet sets at the same thread count feel completely different, the answer is rarely the thread count. It's the fibre origin — and the regulatory gap in how it's labeled.
Our manufacturing partner in northern Portugal walked us through the realities of cotton sourcing that don't make it into consumer marketing:
| Cotton type | What the label says | What it usually is | Staple length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Egyptian cotton (uncertified) | "100% Egyptian Cotton" | Often grown anywhere, blended with shorter-staple cotton — the label is unregulated | Variable (often short-medium) |
| Egyptian cotton (GIZA certified) | "GIZA 45 / 87 / 88, Cotton Egypt Association" | Genuine Egyptian long-staple, grown in the Nile Delta | 34-37mm (extra-long) |
| Supima / Pima cotton | "American Pima" or "Supima licensed" | Genuine US-grown long-staple, Supima is the trademark | 34-36mm (extra-long) |
| Turkish cotton | "100% Turkish Cotton" | Variable — Aegean region (long-staple) vs Southeast (short-staple) — label rarely specifies | 28-35mm |
| Generic "long-staple" | "100% long-staple cotton" | Could be anywhere; depends entirely on the mill's standards | 28-36mm (huge range) |
The same applies to French flax linen. Belgian and northern French flax (the EU's Belt) produces the strongest, longest fibres — but "European linen" or "100% linen" on a label can also mean cheaper Chinese, Egyptian, or eastern European flax with shorter fibre lengths that pill faster.
The honest fibre-origin shortcuts:
- For cotton: Look for "Supima licensed" or "GIZA-certified Egyptian" or "Pima certified" — these have legal traceability. "100% Egyptian Cotton" without a certificate number is marketing.
- For linen: Look for "European Flax" (CELC certification) or "Belgian Linen" (with the Belgian Linen Quality Mark). These trace fibre origin back to the field.
- For organic anything: GOTS certification covers the entire chain from cotton/flax field through dyeing and finishing. "Made with organic cotton" without GOTS only certifies the raw fibre, not the finished sheet.
The bigger insight: two sheets at "300 thread count, 100% cotton" can have lifespans that differ by 5 years — entirely because of the fibre origin behind the same label. Thread count is verifiable; fibre origin requires you to trust the brand and check the certifications.
How to choose the right bedding fabric for you
| Your priority | Choose | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Hot sleeper | French flax linen | Highest breathability + open weave + thermoregulating |
| Year-round all-purpose | Cotton percale | Breathable, crisp, ages well, hotel-fresh feel |
| Silky / lustrous look | Cotton sateen | The satin look on cotton — not polyester |
| Sensitive skin / eczema | GOTS-certified linen or percale | Untreated, no chemical finishes, breathable |
| Hair retention focus | Mulberry silk satin OR cotton sateen | Both have smooth fibre surfaces; sateen is the budget option |
| Environmental priority | GOTS linen or Tencel | Linen needs minimal water; Tencel uses closed-loop solvent |
| Luxury upgrade | Mulberry silk | The genuine luxury option; budget $300+ for quality |
| Lowest cost-per-year | Cotton percale (GOTS) | $18-28/year over 10 years — beats every "cheap" sheet on total cost |
Mistakes people make choosing bedding fabric
| Mistake | Why it fails | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Buying "1000 thread count" cotton | Above 400 TC, cotton sheets typically use multi-ply threads to inflate the count. The fabric breathes worse, not better. | 300-400 TC long-staple cotton is the optimum |
| Trusting "bamboo" as natural | 99% of "bamboo" sheets are rayon made by chemically pulping bamboo | Check for "bamboo viscose" or "bamboo lyocell" — the honest names |
| Buying "silk satin" under $80 | Real silk satin starts at $200/sheet wholesale. Cheaper "silk" is polyester. | If the price is under $100/sheet, it's almost certainly polyester |
| Choosing microfibre as a "premium upgrade" | Microfibre is polyester with smaller threads — same problems, slightly softer feel | Cotton percale at the same price point is always better |
| Picking sateen for cooling | Sateen has tighter weave than percale, slightly warmer | Percale or linen for hot sleepers; sateen for the silky look |
| Avoiding linen for the wrinkles | Stonewashed linen looks naturally relaxed — the "wrinkles" are the design | If you want wrinkle-free, choose percale instead |
FAQ — bedding fabric types
What is the best fabric for bed sheets?
For most sleepers, GOTS-certified long-staple cotton in a percale weave. For hot sleepers, French flax linen scores higher on breathability and longevity. For the silky-look without polyester, cotton sateen. These three cover ~95% of optimal use cases.
Is bamboo really natural?
No. Almost all "bamboo" sheets are rayon or viscose, made by chemically dissolving bamboo pulp. The FTC has sued major retailers since 2010 for marketing it as natural. Honest products are labeled "bamboo viscose" or "bamboo lyocell."
What thread count should I look for?
300-400 thread count is the sweet spot for long-staple cotton. Above 400 TC, manufacturers typically use multi-ply threads that inflate the count without improving quality. Higher TC ≠ better fabric.
What's the difference between satin and sateen?
Satin is a weave structure. Sateen specifically refers to cotton (or rayon) in a satin weave. All sateen is technically satin, but not all satin is sateen. Polyester satin is the most common form sold online.
Is microfibre good for bed sheets?
No — microfibre is polyester with thinner threads. It traps heat, holds odour, pills around 30 washes, and sheds microplastics. The "softness" of microfibre disappears within 6 months.
Which fabric is best for sensitive skin?
GOTS-certified organic cotton percale or stonewashed linen. Both are untreated (no formaldehyde finishes, no optical brighteners), breathable, and washable hot to kill dust mites.
Is linen better than cotton?
For hot sleepers and long-term value buyers, yes — linen has higher breathability, longer lifespan (8-10 years), and softens with every wash. For year-round all-purpose use, cotton percale is more versatile.
What do 5-star hotels use?
Almost exclusively long-staple cotton percale at 300-400 thread count. The crisp matte feel signals "luxury hotel" to guests, and percale survives 300+ industrial washes per year better than any other fabric.
Is Tencel better than cotton?
Tencel is more environmentally responsible (closed-loop solvent recycling) and feels slightly cooler in summer, but it doesn't match cotton's durability — 3-5 years vs 5-10 years for cotton. For sustainability priority, Tencel wins. For value, cotton wins.
Which fabric pills the least?
Long-staple cotton (Pima, Egyptian, Supima) and stonewashed linen are the most pilling-resistant. Microfibre and polyester are the worst. The pilling depends on fibre length more than fabric type.
The honest answer
If you ignore the marketing and look at what survives 90 nights of side-by-side testing, the answer collapses to three fabrics: French flax linen for hot sleepers and long-term value, organic cotton percale for year-round all-purpose use, organic cotton sateen for the silky look without polyester. Everything else is either a niche choice (silk, Tencel) or a worse-on-every-metric synthetic (microfibre, polyester, blends, "bamboo" rayon).
Choose by sleeping habit, not by marketing words. The decision will last 5-10 years.
— Or & Zon —
Honest fabric, woven in Portugal
GOTS-certified French flax linen, organic cotton percale and sateen. The 3 fabrics that survive 90-night testing — and 10 years of wear.
Comments