What you can actually get under $300
The Tesla mattress market has clear pricing tiers. Below $150 you get TESMAT Solo (3cm foam) or generic non-Tesla-shaped pads. At $250-300, hybrid air-foam mattresses with built-in pumps become available. Above $400, you reach premium pure foam options.
The $300 ceiling is a meaningful tier β it's where you stop compromising on shape and pump but still don't get premium foam.
Top 3 under $300
| Mattress | Price | Score |
|---|---|---|
| TESMAT Luxe Y | $279 | 8.5/10 |
| Havnby Foam | $269 | 7.6/10 |
| TESMAT Solo Y | $139 | 7.5/10 |
Where to spend the extra $30
Going from $269 (Havnby Foam) to $299 (TESMAT Luxe with code) buys you a hybrid foam-over-air construction with built-in pump. The pump is the more meaningful upgrade β manual inflation gets old fast.
Where the price ceiling bites
Under $300 you cannot get the premium pure foam comfort of a $599 Snuuzu or the 19cm self-leveling depth of a $360 Havnby Autolevel. If you camp 5+ nights per year, pay for the upgrade. For occasional weekend trips, $300 is fine. See our full budget guide for options under $250 specifically.
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