Cariloha bamboo sheets review
Cariloha Bamboo Sheets Review 2025
I started sleeping on Cariloha bamboo sheets years ago, before Yawnder even had a showroom. This is the update I wish I had when I first bought them. Below I walk through feel, cooling, durability, my five year long term experience, and how they stack up next to Brooklinen and Boll and Branch for real world use, not just specs on a chart.
Overall rating 9.0 out of 10. Very soft bamboo sateen feel, calm temperature for hot sleepers, and better than expected durability with normal wash care. Great fit for people who want a cooler and smoother feel than cotton without a slippery silk surface.
Bottom line
Cariloha bamboo sheets feel smoother and cooler than most luxury cotton sets I have tested, including some that cost more. They hold up well with gentle care, and the lifetime quality guarantee adds real value. If you sleep warm or want a softer fabric that still feels clean and breathable, they deserve a spot on your short list.
Check price at CarilohaThis link goes through Yawnder. It helps support the site at no extra cost to you.
Test results
Scores are my editor estimates based on hands on testing in the Yawnder showroom and at home with repeat washes and direct comparisons to cotton sets in a similar price range.
Feel and fit on the bed
Cariloha uses bamboo viscose in a sateen weave around a four hundred thread count. On skin it feels smoother and more fluid than cotton sateen and much softer than cotton percale. The first night you notice that cool, almost lotion like glide when you move, without the slippery feel that some silk sets have.
The fitted sheet has a bit of stretch and a deep pocket design that makes it much easier to get around modern mattresses and pillow tops. On a thick hybrid it hugs the corners instead of fighting you while you pull it down. Once on, it lays flat without a lot of extra fabric bunching top and bottom.
Feel lands in the medium soft to soft zone. If you like crisp hotel cotton this is a different experience. If you want something smoother and cooler, this is the direction to go.
Cooling and moisture control
I sweat test bedding by sleeping under it on warmer nights and tracking how quickly the bed surface comes back to a neutral temperature once I move. Bamboo does well here. Cariloha pulls heat and moisture away from the skin faster than most cotton sets I own.
With Cariloha, I notice fewer wake ups from that hot and sticky feeling in the middle of the night. The fabric feels dry again faster, which matters if you live in a warmer climate or share a bed with another warm sleeper.
On my scale Cariloha sits above Brooklinen cotton for cooling and close to the best eucalyptus and performance blends I have tested.
Durability, wash care, and day to day use
Right out of the package the fabric feels very smooth. The real question is what it looks like after years of normal use. Washed on gentle and dried on low, the set I keep in rotation has held up better than I expected.
- Seams stay tight without loose threads along the hem
- No major pilling on high pressure zones like the torso and knees
- Elastic on the fitted sheet still keeps a tight grip on the mattress
Like most sateen, Cariloha will show some light wrinkles out of the dryer. If you smooth it by hand as you put it on the bed, it looks clean enough that I have never felt the need to iron it. If you over dry on high heat, you can shorten the life of any bamboo fabric, so I always recommend low heat or line dry where possible.
Five year long term update
I have lived with Cariloha for about five years now. During that time I have rotated through plenty of other sheet sets in the name of testing. Some looked great for a few months and fell apart quickly. Some held up but never felt all that comfortable after the first few nights. Cariloha has ended up back on my bed more often than I expected.
The original set I tested has seen regular use, not gentle weekend guest room duty. We washed it often, put it on the bed through hotter months, and let pets walk across it. Here is what stands out after that much time.
- The softness is still there. The fabric has broken in a bit and feels even more relaxed, but it never turned rough or scratchy.
- The color has held up. The white set still looks bright. Some cheaper bamboo sets start to look tired or gray over time. This one has not.
- Pilling is minimal. When I compare it next to bargain bamboo sets I picked up from big box stores, the difference is obvious. Those budget sets show fuzz and balling at the knee and elbow zones. The Cariloha set shows slight wear but the surface still looks smooth.
- Elastic is still strong. The fitted sheet still grabs the corners on deeper mattresses and does not slide up when I sit near the edge.
The main trade off with this kind of smooth bamboo fabric is that it can show tiny snags if you drag something sharp across it. I have only seen a couple of those in five years, mostly from a pet claw that caught the top sheet. They were small enough that they did not affect use, but it is worth mentioning if you have pets who like to knead.
Would I buy another set today knowing what I know after five years. Yes. In fact I already have. When I test cotton sets from Brooklinen or Boll and Branch and then go back to Cariloha, the switch back feels cooler and smoother almost every time.
Brand comparisons and charts
Here is a quick side by side look at how Cariloha compares to Brooklinen and Boll and Branch on the things that matter most day to day.
| Feature | Cariloha Bamboo | Brooklinen Cotton | Boll and Branch Organic Cotton |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fabric | Bamboo viscose sateen | Cotton percale and sateen options | Organic cotton percale and sateen |
| Softness feel | Very smooth and fluid, almost silk like without slip | Crisp percale or smooth sateen, more traditional feel | Soft, weighty cotton with more texture than bamboo |
| Cooling | High cooling and strong moisture pull | Good cooling on percale, average on sateen | Moderate cooling, more cozy than cool |
| Price range for queen | About one hundred eighty to two hundred twenty dollars | About one hundred forty to one hundred eighty dollars | Often around three hundred to three hundred fifty dollars |
| Best fit | Hot sleepers and people who want a cooler, smoother feel | Shoppers who like classic cotton with clear weave options | Buyers who care most about organic cotton and a heavier luxury feel |
Score style comparison
Editor estimates below are for queen size sets in similar price bands.
If cooling and a smooth feel are top priority, Cariloha wins. If you want a classic cotton feel or a heavier organic story with a bit more texture, then Brooklinen or Boll and Branch make more sense.
Eco story and materials
Bamboo grows quickly, needs less water than cotton, and does not require pesticides. Cariloha uses bamboo viscose, which means the raw plant is processed into a fiber and then spun into yarn. They describe a closed loop style approach that recycles water and solvents along the way and lean on energy efficient production to lower the overall impact.
Is it perfect. No textile process is. Is it a step up from conventionally grown cotton made with heavy chemical use and more water. In most cases yes. If you want the absolute strict standard for organic cotton and do not care as much about cooling, Boll and Branch is the stronger pick. If you want something cooler with a better story than basic cotton, Cariloha fits that lane.
Price, value, and where Cariloha fits
Cariloha prices move with promotions, but here is the general range I see most often at the time of this update.
- Queen set usually around one hundred eighty to two hundred twenty dollars
- King set usually around two hundred twenty to two hundred sixty dollars
That puts Cariloha above most basic cotton sets and below many high end organic cotton brands. When I factor in softness, cooling, and the long term performance of my older set, the value lands in a good place for people who can stretch the budget a bit for better sleep.
See today’s best deal on CarilohaClick through for current bundles and seasonal offers. Brands change sales often, so the live page will always beat any static chart.
FAQ
Do Cariloha sheets sleep cool
Yes. Bamboo viscose has strong moisture pull and breathes better than most cotton sets I test. For warm sleepers this is one of the main reasons to choose Cariloha over a standard cotton set.
Do Cariloha sheets pill
With gentle wash on cool or warm and low heat dry, pilling stays low. After years of use I see less pilling on Cariloha than on lower cost bamboo sets and some cotton sateen sets in my rotation.
Are Cariloha sheets safe for sensitive skin
The bamboo fabric is naturally smooth and non scratchy and many people with sensitive skin like it better than textured cotton. As always, if you have known sensitivities to certain finishes or detergents, check the fiber content and care instructions first.
Do I need a special mattress or base for Cariloha sheets
No. They work on standard mattresses, hybrids, foam beds, and adjustable bases. The fitted sheet pocket is generous enough for most modern mattresses with comfort layers.
How do Cariloha sheets compare to Brooklinen
Brooklinen gives you classic cotton in crisp percale and smoother sateen. Cariloha feels cooler and more fluid. If you want that easy hotel cotton feel, Brooklinen works. If you want something that feels cooler and softer on first contact, Cariloha is the more interesting choice.
How do Cariloha sheets compare to Boll and Branch
Boll and Branch leans into organic cotton, a heavier hand, and a strong ethical story. Cariloha leans into cooling and a smoother feel with bamboo viscose. If organic cotton certification is your main filter, Boll and Branch is the better fit. If cooling is the main pain point, Cariloha takes the lead.
Can I wash Cariloha sheets in a regular machine
Yes. Use a gentle cycle, cool or warm water, and mild detergent. Dry on low heat and avoid overload and harsh chemicals to keep the fibers in good shape.
How I test bedding at Yawnder
Every bedding review on Yawnder comes from direct use, not just reading the spec sheet. For Cariloha that means:
- Sleeping on the sheets at home across seasons with a mix of foam and hybrid mattresses
- Comparing feel side by side against Brooklinen and Boll and Branch sets in the same room and on the same bed
- Repeat wash cycles on gentle with different detergents to see how fast color, softness, and elastic change
- Heat and moisture checks by tracking how quickly the surface cools after extended contact during warmer nights
- Five year long term checks, including visual inspection of seams, elastic, and any pilling on the main wear zones
Scores and notes are my own, based on that hands on testing and years of helping people match bedding to how they actually sleep, not just how they imagine they sleep on a product page.