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Both of these come from Leesa, and they share a similar surface feel — but underneath they're built differently. The Leesa Original is an all-foam mattress. The Sapira is Leesa's hybrid, swapping the foam support core for pocketed coils. That changes support, edge strength, cooling, and who each bed suits best.
I tested both in Queen over eight nights each. For the full Leesa lineup, see the Leesa review, and for a popular head-to-head, Leesa vs Nectar.
Specs Comparison
| Feature | Leesa Original | Sapira Hybrid |
|---|---|---|
| Construction | All-foam (3 layers) | Foam comfort + pocketed coils |
| Firmness | Medium (5.5/10) | Medium-firm (6.5/10) |
| Edge Support | Fair | Good (coil perimeter) |
| Best For | Lighter sleepers, foam fans | Heavier sleepers, couples |
| Trial Period | 100 nights | 100 nights |
Foam vs Hybrid
The Sapira's pocketed coils give it the support advantage. For testers over about 230 lbs, the coil base kept the spine better aligned and prevented the deeper sinking that the all-foam Leesa allowed. The coils also make the Sapira more responsive and easier to move on.
Edge support follows the same pattern: the Sapira's coil perimeter holds firm when you sit on the side, while the all-foam Leesa compresses more. For couples sharing a Queen, that's usable surface area.
The all-foam Leesa Original isn't outclassed, though — for lighter sleepers who want a softer, classic foam feel and a lower price, it's the better fit. Cooling slightly favors the Sapira thanks to coil airflow, but both stay within a comfortable range.
Performance Scores
For more head-to-heads, see the full comparisons index. Or browse our top-rated mattresses of 2026.