Quick Answer
A coverlet is a lightweight, woven bed covering that sits on top of your sheets as a decorative and light-warmth layer — thinner than a comforter, smaller than a bedspread, and without the fill of a quilt or duvet. It typically doesn't reach the floor (it covers the mattress top and sides but not the box spring), making it ideal for layering. Coverlets are usually woven cotton (often matelassé, a textured quilted-look weave) and are prized for being lightweight, breathable, easy to wash, and perfect for warm climates or as a styling layer over a duvet. Think of it as the bedding equivalent of a light jacket.
Key Takeaways
- A coverlet is a lightweight top layer — no fill. It's woven for light warmth and decoration, unlike fill-filled quilts, comforters, or duvets.
- It covers the mattress top and sides, not the floor. Shorter than a bedspread, designed for layering over sheets.
- Matelassé is the classic coverlet weave. A tightly woven cotton with a quilted-look texture produced on the loom — no batting, exceptional durability.
- Best for warm climates and styling. Use alone in summer or as a decorative/extra-warmth layer over a duvet in cooler months.
- Lighter, more breathable, easier to wash than a comforter. The summer-friendly, low-maintenance bed covering.
- Coverlet ≠ quilt ≠ bedspread ≠ duvet. Each is a distinct layer — the terms are widely confused.
"What is a coverlet?" is one of bedding's most-confused questions, because the word gets used interchangeably with quilt, bedspread, and even comforter — when it's actually a distinct layer with its own purpose. After three years of selling layered bedding, here's the clear definition and where the coverlet fits in your bed.

A coverlet is the lightweight top layer — the bedding equivalent of a light jacket.
What exactly is a coverlet?
A coverlet is a lightweight, woven bed covering designed to sit on top of your sheets as a decorative and light-warmth layer. The defining characteristics:
| Characteristic | Coverlet |
|---|---|
| Fill | None — it's a woven single layer (or very lightly layered) |
| Weight | Light — for decoration and minimal warmth |
| Size / drop | Covers mattress top and sides; does NOT reach the floor |
| Material | Usually woven cotton, often matelassé; also linen |
| Primary use | Summer cover, decorative layer, or extra warmth over a duvet |
| Washing | Easy — lightweight, machine-washable, fast-drying |
The word "coverlet" comes from the French couvre-lit — literally "bed cover." Historically it was a decorative top layer; today it's prized as the lightweight, breathable, easy-care layer that works in warm climates or as a styling element.
Coverlet vs quilt vs bedspread vs comforter vs duvet
This is where the confusion lives. Here's every bed-covering layer, clearly distinguished:
| Layer | Fill? | Weight | Drop (length) | Primary purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coverlet | No fill (woven) | Light | Mattress top + sides, not floor | Summer cover / decorative / light layer |
| Quilt | Light batting (stitched) | Light-medium | Mattress top + sides | Year-round light warmth + texture |
| Bedspread | Usually no fill | Light-medium | Reaches the floor, covers pillows | Full decorative cover (older style) |
| Comforter | Heavy fill (sewn in) | Heavy | Mattress top + sides | Primary warmth, all-in-one |
| Duvet + cover | Heavy fill insert (removable cover) | Heavy (adjustable) | Mattress top + sides | Primary warmth, washable, restyleable |
| Blanket / throw | No fill (woven/knit) | Light-medium | Variable | Extra warmth, accent |
The quickest way to tell them apart: coverlet = lightweight woven, no fill, doesn't reach the floor. Quilt = light batting, stitched. Bedspread = reaches the floor. Comforter/duvet = heavy fill for primary warmth.
What is matelassé? (The classic coverlet weave decoded)
Most premium coverlets are woven in matelassé — and understanding this weave explains why a good coverlet outlasts almost every other bedding layer. Our manufacturing partner in Portugal walked us through it:
Matelassé (French for "quilted" or "padded") is a double-cloth weave produced on the loom that creates a raised, quilted-look texture without any batting or stitching layers. Two sets of warp and weft threads are interwoven so that areas pucker and raise, mimicking the look of hand-quilting — but it's all one integrated piece of cloth.
| Property | Matelassé coverlet | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Construction | Single integrated double-cloth weave | No batting to shift, clump, or pill — the #1 failure point of quilts |
| Durability | 10-15 years | Nothing to come apart; survives 200+ washes |
| Texture | Raised, dimensional, quilted-look | Adds visual depth to a bed without bulk |
| Weight | Substantial but breathable | Light warmth without trapping heat |
| Care | Machine wash, tumble dry low | No special handling; no batting to protect |
The relevant insight: because matelassé has no batting, it's the most durable lightweight bed covering you can buy. A quilt's batting eventually shifts and the loft fades; a matelassé coverlet has nothing to degrade — it just softens with age like a good cotton fabric.

Matelassé weave — the quilted look produced on the loom, with no batting to clump or pill.
— Or & Zon —
Lightweight layers, woven to last
GOTS-certified cotton and stonewashed linen coverlets and quilts, woven in Portugal — the breathable top layer for summer or styling.
When to use a coverlet
| Situation | How to use the coverlet |
|---|---|
| Warm climate / summer | Use alone over a fitted sheet — light warmth, maximum breathability |
| Layering over a duvet | Fold at the foot of the bed for decoration + extra warmth on cool nights |
| Styling a made bed | The textured top layer that makes a bed look "finished" and hotel-styled |
| Guest room | Low-maintenance, washes easily, looks polished without a heavy duvet |
| Hot sleeper | Use alone or with a linen sheet — far cooler than a comforter |
| Transitional seasons (spring/autumn) | The right weight when a duvet is too warm but a sheet alone is too cool |
Coverlet sizing guide
Coverlets are sized to cover the mattress top and drape over the sides — but not reach the floor. Match to your bed:
| Bed size | Typical coverlet size (in) | Drop on each side |
|---|---|---|
| Twin / Twin XL | 66" × 90" | ~12" |
| Full / Queen | 94" × 98" | ~14" |
| King / Cal King | 110" × 98" | ~14" |
If you want the covering to reach the floor and cover the pillows, you want a bedspread, not a coverlet. The coverlet's shorter drop is intentional — it's designed for layering, not full coverage.
Coverlet materials compared
| Material | Feel | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Cotton matelassé | Substantial, textured, dimensional | Durability + styling; the classic choice |
| Stonewashed linen | Relaxed, breathable, casual-elegant | Hot sleepers, warm climates, relaxed aesthetic |
| Lightweight woven cotton | Soft, simple, light | Budget-friendly summer layer |
| Polyester / blends | Slick, less breathable | ❌ Avoid — traps heat, defeats the breathable purpose |
Mistakes people make with coverlets
| Mistake | Why it fails | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Expecting a coverlet to be your main warmth | It has no fill — it's a light layer, not a primary cover | Use a duvet or comforter for primary warmth; coverlet for layering |
| Buying a coverlet expecting floor coverage | Coverlets don't reach the floor by design | Buy a bedspread if you want full coverage |
| Choosing polyester to save money | Defeats the breathable, lightweight purpose | Cotton matelassé or linen |
| Confusing coverlet with quilt | A quilt has batting; a coverlet (matelassé) doesn't | Matelassé for durability; quilt for slightly more warmth |
| Using a heavy coverlet in summer over a duvet | Two layers can trap heat | Coverlet alone in summer; layer over duvet only in cool months |
FAQ — what is a coverlet
What is a coverlet used for?
A coverlet is a lightweight top layer used as a summer bed covering, a decorative styling layer, or an extra-warmth layer folded over a duvet on cool nights. It provides light warmth and a finished look without the bulk of a comforter or duvet.
What's the difference between a coverlet and a quilt?
A coverlet is typically a woven single layer with no batting (often matelassé), while a quilt has a layer of batting stitched between fabric layers. The quilt provides slightly more warmth; the coverlet is more durable because there's no batting to shift or clump.
What's the difference between a coverlet and a bedspread?
A bedspread reaches the floor and usually covers the pillows for full coverage. A coverlet is shorter — it covers the mattress top and sides but not the box spring or floor — making it ideal for layering.
Is a coverlet warm enough on its own?
In warm climates and summer, yes — over a fitted sheet, a coverlet provides light warmth and excellent breathability. In cooler weather, use it as a layer over a duvet or comforter rather than as your sole covering.
What is a coverlet made of?
Most quality coverlets are woven cotton, often in a matelassé weave that creates a quilted look without batting. Linen coverlets are also popular for warm climates. Avoid polyester coverlets — they trap heat and defeat the breathable purpose.
What is matelassé?
Matelassé is a double-cloth weave produced on the loom that creates a raised, quilted-look texture without any batting or stitching layers. It's the classic coverlet construction — durable (10-15 years), breathable, and dimensional.
Can you use a coverlet in winter?
Yes — as a layer. In winter, use the coverlet over a duvet or comforter for extra warmth and decoration. On its own, a coverlet isn't warm enough for cold-weather sleeping.
Do coverlets go over or under the duvet?
Either. Folded at the foot of the bed over the duvet for styling and grab-when-cold warmth, or layered under a duvet as an extra layer. Most commonly it's folded across the foot as a decorative top layer.
What size coverlet do I need?
Coverlets cover the mattress top and drape ~12-14" over the sides without reaching the floor. Queen is typically 94" × 98", King around 110" × 98". If you want floor coverage, you need a bedspread instead.
Is a coverlet good for hot sleepers?
Yes — a cotton matelassé or linen coverlet is one of the best options for hot sleepers, providing light warmth with maximum breathability. It's far cooler than any comforter or heavy duvet.
The bottom line
A coverlet is the lightweight, breathable, no-fill top layer of the bedding world — the equivalent of a light jacket. It covers the mattress top and sides (not the floor), provides light warmth, and works beautifully as a summer cover, a styling layer, or extra warmth folded over a duvet.
For the most durable version, choose a cotton matelassé — the loom-woven quilted texture has no batting to clump, so it lasts 10-15 years and softens with age. For hot climates and a relaxed look, choose stonewashed linen. Either way, the coverlet is the layer that makes a bed feel finished without the bulk of a comforter.
— Or & Zon —
The breathable top layer for any season
GOTS-certified cotton and stonewashed French flax linen coverlets and quilts, woven in Portugal — light warmth, full breathability, built to last.
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