Switching mattress vendors isn’t a decision most hoteliers make lightly. There are renovation windows to coordinate, franchise standards to navigate, and the ever-present fear of disrupting operations at exactly the wrong moment. So most properties stick with what they know, even when what they know isn’t working.But there are usually signs along the way, long before a property actually starts shopping for a new vendor. In conversations with hotel owners, operators, and procurement teams across the country, the same signals come up again and again. See if any of this sounds familiar.
Your Mattresses Aren’t Lasting Like They Used To
It often starts with the product itself. Operators in high-occupancy environments are increasingly reporting that modern mattresses aren’t holding up as long as they used to, particularly as the industry has moved toward single-sided designs. If you’re replacing mattresses earlier than expected, or noticing wear well before the warranty period is up, that’s a signal worth taking seriously.When guests start commenting on comfort in reviews, or when a property manager can see the wear with their own eyes, the calculus changes quickly. A mattress that looked like a cost-efficient decision at purchase becomes an expensive problem when it needs replacing ahead of schedule. The total cost of ownership starts to tell a very different story than the original price per unit.If durability is becoming a recurring conversation rather than a one-time concern, it’s worth asking your vendor for real lab testing and performance data, not just marketing language.You Can’t Remember the Last Time Your Rep Called You
Product performance is rarely the only issue. More often, it’s the service relationship that signals trouble first.If your vendor was responsive at the point of sale but has gone quiet since, that’s a pattern worth noticing. The real test comes when something goes wrong: a delivery issue during a renovation, a foundation problem post-installation. If you’re not confident your vendor will show up in that moment, you already know something about the relationship.The most loyal hospitality buyers tend to describe the same thing: a specific person they can call, someone who’s proactive rather than reactive, and a vendor willing to stand behind the product when something goes wrong. If that no longer describes your experience, whether because of rep turnover or a shift in vendor priorities, it’s a sign worth paying attention to.The Process Feels Unfamiliar, and That Makes It Feel Risky
For most hoteliers, switching mattress vendors isn’t something they’ve done recently, or ever. A property typically replaces its mattresses every ten to twelve years, which means the person navigating that decision today may be doing it for the first time, or relying on institutional knowledge from someone who’s long since moved on.That infrequency breeds uncertainty. Hoteliers aren’t sure what to expect from a new vendor’s process, what questions to ask, or where things are likely to go wrong. And when you don’t know what “normal” looks like, every unfamiliar step starts to feel like a red flag, even when it isn’t one.That uncertainty is often a bigger barrier to switching than any actual flaw in a new vendor’s process. If hesitation is coming from not knowing what to expect rather than a real concern about the product or partner, that’s worth separating out. The vendors who earn trust in this moment are the ones who get ahead of that uncertainty: walking a property through exactly what to expect, setting clear timelines, and treating a process that happens once a decade with the seriousness it deserves.Renovation Logistics Keep Becoming a Headache
Renovation windows are tight. If your vendor can’t coordinate delivery around that window, or assumes every property has a loading dock and a full crew available to unload, that friction tends to repeat itself. It’s not usually a one-time issue.Smaller properties and boutique hotels feel this most acutely. If you’ve found yourself improvising around a vendor’s logistics rather than the other way around, or if past renovations have included more last-minute scrambling than they should have, that’s a pattern worth flagging before the next one.The Math Doesn’t Add Up the Way It Used To
Price alone rarely drives a switch. But when service has declined, the product’s underperforming, and the process feels like more work than it should, a competitor’s pricing starts to look a lot more attractive. The gap doesn’t need to be dramatic for that math to start shifting.If you find yourself wondering what else is out there, that’s usually not really about price. It’s a sign that the value equation as a whole has stopped feeling like a sure thing.If This Sounds Familiar
None of these signs on their own necessarily means it’s time to switch. But if two or three of them sound like your experience, that’s worth a closer look.At Tempur Sealy Hospitality, we built our model around never giving hoteliers a reason to switch. Testing standards that go beyond what the industry requires, so durability stops being a guessing game. A 10-year warranty that means something when something goes wrong, not just language in a contract. And a once-in-a-decade decision treated like the start of a partnership, not the end of a sales call.We call it being the Best By Every Measure. If you’re seeing the signs, we’re glad to have the conversation.