Skip to main content

Meet smart mattress pad Luna: It knows when you’re sleeping and awake

Even if you’re not an exercise fiend, you may still want a wearable to track your sleep patterns and inform you when you didn’t get a good night’s rest (just in case the under-eye bags and unquenchable thirst for coffee weren’t good enough clues). But it can be hard to find a time to charge these trackers. You want them on during the day to count your steps and at night to monitor your midnight movements.

Quite a few new sleep devices are coming to the market that don’t require you slip anything onto your wrist. One we saw at CES takes the onus off the sleeper and transfers it your bed. It’s a washable, Wi-Fi-connected mattress pad that heats your bed to your desired temperature and syncs with your other smart devices to shut the house down for the night right when you get into bed. Unlike something like the Sleep Number X12, which requires an $8,000 upgrade, the Luna smart mattress cover slips over your existing mattress.

“Everything started because I was having problems [getting] to sleep,” says Matteo Franceschetti, co-founder of Luna. He and his partner, Massimo Andreasi Bassi, wanted something that would work with people’s existing beds.

First and foremost, the Luna functions as heating pad. It’s dual-zone, meaning you can crank it up to 83 degrees Fahrenheit, while your bedmate stays 10 degrees cooler. But it’s not like a traditional heating pad, Bassi insists. Once the bed gets up to your preferred temperature —which it learns over time, like the smart thermostat Nest— the bed is basically self-sustaining at that temperature. “It’s off 95 percent of the time,” says Bassi, only delivering a few bursts of heat throughout the night to keep your toes toasty and using only a low voltage to do so.

Through their testing process, Bassi and Franceschetti learned that most people don’t want to be overly warm at night; the “hot spots,” placed near the feet and lower back, can be shifted a bit and really only warm compared to the rest of the bed. The pad isn’t meant to feel hot to the touch; it’s just supposed to make the bed not cold.

Luna Smart Mattress Pad AppThe Luna’s ability to learn is only one feature of the pad, though. It tracks your sleep with accelerometers, a snoring-sensitive microphone, and sensors that to measure breath frequency and heart rate. Right now, Luna is partnered with Lockitron, Beep, Emberlight, and Nest, so when you get into bed, the pad will sync with your smart door lock, lights, and thermostat to secure the house and get it ready for the night.

That’s just the beginning, though. Bassi wants the Luna to integrate even more fully with your home and health. If you sleep better one night, for example, it might figure out that working out at a particular time had a positive impact. Because the Luna can figure out exactly when you enter different phases of sleep, it should eventually be able to pause your Netflix stream right when you fall asleep.

That ability of Luna’s, to sense your sleep cycle, is intriguing to a lot of people, and Bassi hopes users and third-party developers will come with interesting uses for it. In fact, a friend of his already has. “He built a prototype app to have his phone play a voice when he hits REM phase,” says Bassi. “So, this voices that says, ‘You’re sleeping’ when he hits that phase, and he says it helps him achieve lucid dreams.”

Of course, the bed is a pretty personal space, and all this data is going somewhere. In fact, Bassi says sleep scientists at New York University and Stanford are interested in working with the Luna team. They’re interested in getting sleep data on a regular basis from people going about their normal routines — and less normal routines. If you normally wear a sleep tracker but come home drunk and forget to put it on before passing out, that’s an interesting night of information lost to researchers. Not so with a smart mattress pad.

Still, Bassi insists users will have control over their data, especially what’s released to third-party developers. He says the sleep scientists are interested in your sleep cycles and only your sleep cycles. Your other nocturnal (or Sunday morning, whatever) activities? The Luna may capture your movement, heart rate, and other data for that, but it shouldn’t transmit it, because you’re not actually asleep.

At CES, Bassi said a queen-sized mattress pad will retail for $249; it will be $279 for the king; he anticipates that during a crowdfunding campaign, they’ll have 500 early birds priced at $179.

Jenny McGrath
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jenny McGrath is a senior writer at Digital Trends covering the intersection of tech and the arts and the environment. Before…
Rock-a-bye baby: The Adiva One is a smart bed that literally rocks you to sleep
adiva one smart bed rocking motion

Everyone knows the best way to put a baby to sleep is to rock them, but when is the last time an adult was rocked to sleep? Adiva, a smart sleep science company, believes that a gentle rolling motion might be the key to getting the best sleep of your life. They're putting that to the test with the Adiva One, a set of modular bed legs that can be attached to any standard frame. The legs move in a pattern to give the bed a gentle rocking motion while you sleep.

Adiva cites research that found an oscillatory motion improved the length and quality of sleep of participants in the study. As science discovers more links between overall physical and mental health and the quality of sleep you receive each night, it's more important than ever to find a way to welcome the sandman in a way that works for you.

Read more
Nest Doorbell vs. Ring Battery Doorbell Plus: which is the better video doorbell?
The Ring Battery Doorbell Plus installed outside a front door.

Ring and Nest are responsible for some of the best video doorbells available. With easy-to-use smartphone apps, simple installation processes, and the ability to customize your motion alerts, the Ring Battery Doorbell Plus and Nest Doorbell have quickly established themselves as two of the best video doorbells money can buy.

But what exactly is the difference between these two popular gadgets? And which is better for your smart home?

Read more
The best Apple HomeKit devices for 2023
A person unlocking the Aqara U100 smart lock with their phone.

While not as widespread as Google Home or Amazon Alexa, Apple HomeKit remains one of the most popular smart home ecosystems of 2023. The software plays well with iOS devices, and several other gadgets such as smart lights, smart locks, thermostats, and cameras can be controlled using the fancy technology. If you’re looking to build your smart home around Apple’s ecosystem, here are the best HomeKit devices available today.
Locks

HomeKit doesn’t have the largest selection of smart locks, but that doesn’t really matter when you have something as well-rounded as the Aqara Smart Lock U100. Not only does it offer full HomeKit support, but you’ll even gain access to Apple home keys -- allowing you to unlock your door with your iPhone or Apple Watch. There’s also the standard keypad for entering a passcode, along with a fingerprint sensor that can store several dozen fingerprints (so your whole family can enter the home without worrying about forgetting their password or smartphone).

Read more