Pregnancy and sleep are not easy bed fellows. I’m eight months pregnant and have been dealing with hip pain for over two months. It’s a mix of pregnancy-related sciatica and my body being an overachiever at producing relaxin, the hormone responsible for causing the ligaments in the pelvis to loosen, ready for the big day. 

Hip pain during pregnancy

A mattress won’t solve your pregnancy hip pain alone, so ask your midwife or doctor for help. I was referred to a physical therapist who gave me exercises to strengthen my pelvis and surrounding muscles, but you might need something different. Speak with your healthcare provider and tell them that hip pain is keeping you awake at night. Growing a baby is hard work and you need all the sleep you can get.

Luckily, as a Sleep Editor I get to test the best mattresses for all types of sleeper. I currently have three mattresses on rotation at home for long-term testing, but only one has relieved my hip pain at night during pregnancy: the Emma Original.

You might at first overlook the Emma because it’s cheap. But this memory foam mattress has made a big difference to how long I can sleep on my side without waking in discomfort. I’m still waking up often to use the bathroom and to shift to my other side, of course, but the Emma helps me to sleep for longer each time I drop off again.

How long? I’ve gone from waking every hour on my previous mattress to every two-ish hours on the Emma. As my sleep tracker tells me, that’s enough to get me through a full sleep cycle (roughly 90 mins) and then some.

How the Emma eases my pregnancy hip pain

I was previously sleeping on the Eve Premium Hybrid mattress, which is an exceptional foam and coil bed for most sleepers. But when my pregnancy hip pain kicked in the Eve suddenly felt too firm. Same story with the DreamCloud Luxury Hybrid.

I needed more cushioning around my hips, and knowing from experience that memory foam offers the deepest contouring for sore joints, I switched to the Emma. Hands-down, it was one of the best decisions I’ve made for my sleep comfort during pregnancy. 

For me, the Emma offers enough pressure relief to take the edge off discomfort but without digging in. There is a trade-off though, and that’s getting in and out of bed…

Image shows the Emma Original Mattress on a white background

Here’s the Emma Original I’m sleeping on during my third trimester (Image credit: Future)

The drawback to sleeping on the Emma while pregnant

When I originally wrote my Emma Mattress review I flagged up the weaker edge support and how getting up from a memory foam mattress can be harder for some people. Well, now that my baby bump is heavier, it’s more of a struggle getting up from the Emma.

The Eve Premium Hybrid and the DreamCloud are easier to get up from because a) as hybrid mattresses they offer firmer support that I can push off much easier, b) they’re taller than the Emma, and c) they have robust edge support to help me get off the bed. Both are excellent for sitting on the edge when wrestling with my shoes too. 

But neither comes close to the Emma Original for relieving my hip pain at night. So I’m taking the hit on being able to get out of bed a little easier so that hip pain doesn’t keep waking me up every half hour or so… Even if I do look like an upturned beetle trying to scurry off the bed.

If you prefer the sound of the Eve or DreamCloud to help you get in and out of bed easier during pregnancy, here’s the lowdown on those…

This sketch closely resembles the mysterious console seen in the 30th anniversary logo.