Medical Disclaimer: PhysiotherAIpy provides general wellness guidance only and is not a substitute for professional medical diagnosis or advice.
Is Your Mattress Causing Back Pain? What Physios Say
How mattresses affect back pain, simple tests, and when to change or adjust your sleep setup.
A cautious, evidence-informed overview of is your mattress causing back pain? what physios say. This guide outlines what it is, common signs, likely contributors, and safe first steps while encouraging you to seek a qualified physiotherapist or GP if symptoms persist or worsen.
Common symptoms
- Dull ache that worsens with sitting or bending
- Morning stiffness that eases with movement
- Occasional sharp twinges on twisting or lifting
Common causes
- Prolonged sitting or flexed postures
- Sudden spikes in lifting or training load
- Weakness in glutes and deep core
Evidence-based exercises
Cat-Camel Mobility
Gentle spinal motion to reduce stiffness.
Prescription: 10 slow reps x 2 sets, daily
Cues: Move through comfortable range; don’t force end positions.
Glute Bridge
Builds posterior chain strength to offload the back.
Prescription: 12 reps x 3 sets, 3x/week
Cues: Press through heels, ribs down, avoid over-arching.
Bird Dog
Core control to steady the lumbar spine.
Prescription: 10 reps/side x 2 sets, daily
Cues: Keep hips level and move slowly.
Red flag symptoms
- Severe or worsening pain that does not ease with rest
- Numbness, tingling, or weakness spreading into the limb
- Loss of bladder or bowel control, or saddle numbness
- Night pain that disrupts sleep or unexplained weight loss
- History of significant trauma, fever, or feeling very unwell
When to see a physio
If pain is worsening, limiting daily activities, or not improving after 1–2 weeks of sensible self-care, book a physiotherapist or speak with your GP. Seek urgent help for red flag symptoms.