Bedding Not Made in China (2026)
Finding bedding not made in China is possible, but requires more scrutiny than most product categories. Final assembly, fiber production, and fabric weaving can each happen in different countries — and labeling rules vary. The brands below are transparent about the full sourcing chain. We verify current country-of-origin disclosures, manufacturer statements, and independent sourcing information. When production locations change, we update our recommendations.
All brands on this page verified as manufactured outside China. Last verified: April 2026. If you spot a change in manufacturing location, let us know.
Bedding Not Made in China – Quick Comparison
| Brand | Product Type | Made In | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pendleton | Wool blankets & throws | USA | Heirloom wool blankets |
| American Textile | Pillows & mattress pads | USA | Everyday pillows & pads |
| Boll & Branch | Sheets & duvet covers | India (Fair Trade) | Organic cotton sheets |
| Garnet Hill | Sheets, duvets & bedding | Portugal / Europe | European-made linen bedding |
| Coyuchi | Organic cotton sheets | India (GOTS certified) | Certified organic bedding |
| Parachute | Sheets, duvet covers & pillows | Portugal / India | Percale and sateen sheets |
| Brooklinen | Sheets, duvet covers & towels | India / Portugal (varies; silk: China) | Percale and sateen sheets — verify by product |
How to Verify Bedding Country of Origin
Bedding labeling is governed by the US Textile Fiber Products Identification Act, which requires the country of origin to appear on the law label — the small tag sewn into the seam of every textile product sold in the US. Check this tag, not the outer packaging or product listing title. Key distinctions to know:
“Made in USA” — under FTC rules, this requires that all or virtually all of the product was made domestically, including significant processing. A sheet set labelled “Made in USA” must have been cut, sewn, and finished in the US from US-processed fabric.
“Made in USA of imported fabric” — legal and accurate. The sewing and finishing happened in the US but the fabric itself was woven elsewhere. Pendleton uses this designation correctly for its wool blankets.
“Assembled in USA of imported materials” — weaker claim. Assembly happened domestically but the materials are foreign-sourced. This does not qualify as a Made in USA claim under FTC standards.
For more information on this generally, visit our page on How to Tell Where It’s Made When You’re Shopping Online.
1. 🇺🇸 Pendleton
Pendleton has been weaving wool blankets and textiles in the United States since 1863. The company operates mills in Pendleton, Oregon and Washougal, Washington, where virgin wool is washed, carded, spun, and woven on-site. Pendleton’s Native-inspired patterns are produced under licensing agreements with tribal nations and are woven at these mills — not printed overseas and imported.
The wool blanket and throw lines are where origin is most consistently documented. The company also makes cotton bedding, shirts, and home accessories, but those lines vary — the woolen mills are the core manufacturing operation. Check the label before purchasing: Pendleton’s US-woven products are marked “Made in USA of imported wool” — the fiber is sourced internationally but all processing and weaving is done in Oregon or Washington.
- Best for heirloom-quality wool blankets and throws
- USA (mills in Pendleton, Oregon and Washougal, Washington)
*Recommended: Pendleton Yakima Camp Blanket Full Queen 90″ x 90″ – around $285
2. 🇺🇸 American Textile
American Textile Company has been manufacturing bedding products in Pennsylvania since 1925. The company operates facilities in Leechburg and Pittsburgh, producing pillows, mattress pads, mattress protectors, and comforters under several brand names including PureComfort and Charisma. Most pillow and mattress pad production shifted to lower-cost countries in the 1990s and 2000s, and American Textile is one of the few brands that has maintained manufacturing in this segment without offshoring it.
Products are sold at major retailers including Costco, Walmart, and Bed Bath & Beyond under both the American Textile name and licensed brand names. The Charisma line at Costco is made at the Pennsylvania facilities. American Textile also sells some imported lines, so not every product at retail is non-China — check the product label before purchasing. Their website lists which product lines are made at the Pennsylvania facilities.
- Best for pillows and mattress pads at mainstream prices
- USA (Leechburg and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
Not all American Textile product lines are non-China. Check the law label before purchasing.
3. 🇮🇳 Boll & Branch
Boll & Branch makes 100% organic cotton sheets, duvet covers, and pillowcases manufactured in India under Fair Trade USA certification. The company publishes its factory locations and third-party audit results on its website, putting it well ahead of most bedding brands on sourcing transparency. The cotton is GOTS-certified organic, thread counts run from 300 to 500, and the sheets are consistently rated among the highest-performing in independent consumer testing at the premium tier.
This is one of the most thoroughly documented non-China bedding options available at scale. Boll & Branch sells directly and on Amazon, and carries a 30-day trial period. If you want to dig into the sourcing before purchasing, their website has more factory-level detail than most brands in the category. Verify the specific product before buying — the core sheet and duvet lines are the Fair Trade India-manufactured items; some newer product extensions may differ.
- Best for organic cotton sheets with fully published non-China sourcing
- India (Fair Trade USA certified; factory details published at bollandbranch.com)
*Recommended: BOLL & BRANCH Signature Hemmed Sheet Set – King, Juniper – around $300
4. 🇵🇹 Garnet Hill
Garnet Hill is a direct-to-consumer bedding brand that sources its linen, cotton, and percale sheet collections primarily from Portugal and other European mills. The company has been selling premium bedding since 1976 and is transparent about fabric origins on its product pages — most of its core linen bedding is woven in Portugal, where the textile industry has maintained high-quality production standards for centuries. Garnet Hill is one of the more accessible European-sourced bedding options sold through a US-facing retailer.
The linen sheet and duvet collections are the most consistently European-sourced product lines. Garnet Hill also sells cotton and flannel bedding, and sourcing varies by collection — check the product detail page for the specific country of origin before purchasing. Products are sold direct at garnethill.com. Garnet Hill does not have a significant Amazon presence, so most purchases are direct.
- Best for European-sourced linen bedding
- Portugal / Europe (varies by collection — verify on product page)
Not all Garnet Hill collections are European-sourced. Check the product detail page for country of origin.
5. 🇮🇳 Coyuchi
Coyuchi has been making certified organic cotton bedding since 1991, when it was one of the first US brands to focus on organic fiber sourcing and non-toxic processing. All Coyuchi products use GOTS-certified organic cotton — the Global Organic Textile Standard, which covers both fiber and the chemical processing used to finish the fabric. Manufacturing takes place in India at certified facilities that meet both GOTS and Fair Trade standards.
Coyuchi produces sheets, duvet covers, pillowcases, and blankets. Their percale and sateen sheet collections are the core product lines. Pricing is at the premium end of the non-China organic category. For buyers whose primary concern is certified organic fiber and processing — not just non-China origin — Coyuchi has more rigorous third-party certification than most competitors in the space.
- Best for certified organic cotton bedding with GOTS and Fair Trade documentation
- India (GOTS certified; Fair Trade certified facilities)
*Recommended: Coyuchi Classic Sateen Sheet Set King – around $200
6. 🇵🇹 Parachute
Parachute is a direct-to-consumer bedding brand founded in Venice, California in 2014 that sources its percale and sateen sheet collections from Portugal and its flannel and some cotton lines from India. The company is transparent about country of origin on its product pages and has published sourcing details since its launch. Portuguese percale sheets are the most distinctive product — Portugal’s long-standing textile manufacturing tradition produces tightly woven, durable cotton that holds up well over multiple wash cycles.
Parachute sells sheets, duvet covers, pillows, and bath linens direct at parachutehome.com and has a physical retail presence in several US cities. Amazon availability is limited. For each product, the country of origin is listed on the product detail page — check it before purchasing, as sourcing varies across their catalog. The percale sheet set is the most consistently Portugal-sourced item in their lineup and the product most frequently cited in independent bedding reviews.
- Best for percale and sateen sheets from Portuguese mills
- Portugal (percale and sateen lines); India (flannel and select cotton lines — verify per product)
7. Brooklinen — Verify by Product Line
Brooklinen is a Brooklyn-based bedding brand founded in 2014 that manufactures across multiple countries, with country of origin varying by product type. Most of the core sheet collections are made outside China — cotton sheets in India, linen sheets in Portugal — but the silk line is manufactured in China. Brooklinen discloses this directly on every product listing, which puts it ahead of most competitors on transparency, but also means this brand requires a product-by-product check before purchasing.
The distinction matters most for shoppers specifically looking at silk pillowcases or silk sheets, which are a growing category in premium bedding. For those products, Brooklinen is not a non-China option. For cotton percale, sateen, and linen, it is.
Brooklinen’s catalog is broader than most bedding brands — it covers towels, bath linens, and loungewear in addition to sheets and duvets. Pricing sits below most premium Portugal-sourced competitors at comparable thread counts. The brand sells primarily direct at brooklinen.com.
What to check before you buy: On any Brooklinen product page, the country of origin is listed in the product details. For cotton and linen bedding, you’re likely clear of China. For anything labeled silk, you’re not.
- Best for: Percale and sateen sheets at premium-accessible prices with documented non-China sourcing
- Cotton sheets: India | Linen sheets: Portugal | Silk products: China | Towels: Turkey | Down: Canada
*Recommended: Brooklinen Luxury Sateen 4 Piece Sheet Set – 100% Cotton Bed Sheets – around $219
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there any bedding actually made in the USA?
Yes, but options are limited. Pendleton weaves wool blankets in Oregon and Washington. American Textile manufactures pillows and mattress pads in Pennsylvania — though not all of their lines qualify, so check the label. For cotton sheets made entirely in the US, the category is very thin; most domestic textile mills that made sheets closed in the 1990s and 2000s.
What does “organic cotton” mean on a bedding label?
Organic cotton means the fiber was grown without synthetic pesticides or fertilizers. It does not on its own mean the processing and finishing of the fabric was chemical-free. GOTS certification (Global Organic Textile Standard) covers both the fiber and the processing — it is the more rigorous standard. Boll & Branch and Coyuchi both carry GOTS certification. A product labelled simply “organic cotton” without a certification body may not meet the same standard.
Is Pottery Barn bedding made in China?
Pottery Barn sources bedding from multiple countries. Country of origin varies by collection and is listed on individual product pages. Some lines are sourced from Portugal or India; others are made in China. Check the specific product detail page before purchasing — there is no blanket answer for the brand.
Do tariffs affect bedding prices?
The shift in the tariff framework since 2025 has narrowed the price gap between Chinese-manufactured and non-Chinese bedding at the mid-tier. Premium non-China options from Portugal and India were already priced above mass-market alternatives, and that relationship has not changed significantly. See our Tariffs Explained page for the current framework.
Related Pages
- Home Goods Not Made in China — parent pillar covering bedding, cleaning supplies, candles, and vacuums
- Brand Directory — searchable database of all verified brands
- Cleaning Supplies Not Made in China – Method, Mrs Meyers and more
- Tariffs Explained — current framework and what it means for bedding prices
- How to Tell Where It’s Made When You’re Shopping Online – general overview applies to all products online
Looking for a gift for a new graduate? See our Graduation Gifts not made in China roundup.
