Avocado Green Pillow
Shop NowAvocado Molded Latex Pillow
Shop NowPure Talalay Luxury Pillow
Shop NowGrand Luxe Pillow
Shop NowDown Pillow
Shop NowOrganic Mini Pillow
Shop NowMini Molded Latex Pillow
Shop NowOrganic Toddler Pillow
Shop NowAvocado Green Pillow Refill
Shop NowOrganic Cotton Pillow Protector
Shop NowOrganic Waterproof Pillow Protector
Shop NowQuilted Pillow Protector
Shop NowOrganic Toddler Waterproof Pillow Protector
Shop NowOrganic Latex Wedge Pillow
Shop NowOrganic Wedge Pillowcase
Shop NowOrganic Waterproof Wedge Pillow Protector
Shop NowOrganic Latex Wedge Pillow Set
Shop NowOrganic Cotton Pillowcase
Shop NowOrganic Mini + Toddler Pillowcase
Shop NowMini Silk Pillowcase
Shop NowSilk Pillowcase
Shop NowOrganic Cotton Gauze Shams
Shop NowNatural Linen Shams
Shop NowOrganic Throw Pillow Insert
Shop NowAlpaca Wool Throw Pillow Cover
Shop NowTierra Throw Pillow Covers
Shop NowEster Wool Throw Pillow Cover
Shop NowLinear Throw Pillow Covers
Shop NowOrganic Square Meditation Yoga Pillow
Shop NowOrganic Yoga Bolster Pillow
Shop NowOrganic Pranayama Yoga Pillow
Shop NowOrganic Yoga Meditation Pillow
Shop NowOrganic Yoga Mat
Shop NowPercale Organic Cotton Pillowcases 270TC
Shop NowSateen Organic Cotton Pillowcases 300TC
Shop NowPercale Organic Cotton Shams 270TC
Shop NowSateen Organic Cotton Shams 300TC
Shop NowFrequently Asked Questions
What certifications do Avocado pillows hold?
Avocado organic pillows hold six independent finished-product certifications — the same stack applied to our mattresses: GOTS (Global Organic Textile Standard), OEKO-TEX® Standard 100 Class I, MADE SAFE®, EWG Verified®, GREENGUARD Gold, and UL Formaldehyde-Free. These certifications verify the finished pillow as it arrives in your home — not individual materials inside it. OEKO-TEX Class I is the most restrictive classification available, independently verified by Hohenstein (certificate 24.HUS.86422) and specifically designed for products used by babies and toddlers. GOTS certifies the entire finished product through independent third-party audits from farm through finished product — it is not a material-level claim. No other pillow brand, to our knowledge, holds all six simultaneously. Every certification is independently audited and publicly verifiable at global-standard.org (license CU863637) and oeko-tex.com (certificate 24.HUS.86422).
Do Avocado pillows contain PFAS ("forever chemicals")?
No PFAS were detected in Avocado pillow testing. We screen for 320 PFAS substances at parts-per-billion sensitivity using LC/MS/MS and GC-MS methodologies — the same testing protocol applied to our mattresses, toppers, and crib mattresses. Full results, including the complete substance list and methodology, are published in our Help Center. Most pillow brands have never tested for PFAS, let alone published the results. We did both.
What are Avocado pillows not made of?
The difference is structural, not cosmetic. Conventional pillows are typically filled with shredded polyurethane foam, memory foam, or synthetic polyester — petroleum-derived materials engineered to compress and slowly rebound. They tend to trap heat, resist airflow, and break down over time as the foam cells collapse. Some brands have moved from petroleum-derived foam to plant-based bioplastics like PLA in comfort layers — a partial improvement, but still a processed synthetic polymer. Avocado uses unprocessed natural fibers instead.
Organic Dunlop and Pure Talalay® latex, derived from rubber tree sap, have an open-cell structure that compresses and responds immediately, without the heat retention or slow-sink feel of memory foam. Organic kapok fiber, harvested from the seed pods of the kapok tree, is hollow at the core, giving it an exceptionally light, airy loft relative to its weight. Organic cotton breathes rather than insulates, wicking moisture away from the skin rather than holding it. Together, these materials create a sleep surface that adapts to how you sleep rather than resisting it — responsive without being rigid, supportive without trapping heat.
There's also a durability dimension to the feel story. Polyurethane foam degrades — the cells break down under repeated compression, which is why foam pillows go flat. Certified organic latex maintains its structure over years of use. A pillow that feels the same in year three as it did in year one isn't a luxury claim. It's a material science outcome.
Luxury, in this context, is what happens when nothing is working against you.
Are Avocado pillows adjustable?
Yes. The Avocado Green Pillow and Mini Pillow are fully adjustable: they arrive generously filled for a medium-plush feel, and fill can be added or removed through a built-in zipper until you find your preferred loft and firmness. Additional fill is sold separately. The fill is shredded certified organic latex and kapok; not shredded memory foam or polyurethane-based AirFoam. Adjustability doesn't require petroleum-derived materials. Ours uses certified organic ones.
Why do organic pillows feel different from conventional pillows?
The difference is structural, not cosmetic. Conventional pillows are typically filled with shredded polyurethane foam, memory foam, or synthetic polyester — petroleum-derived materials engineered to compress and slowly rebound. They tend to trap heat, resist airflow, and break down over time as the foam cells collapse. The feel is consistent because it's manufactured to be: dense, uniform, and synthetic.
Organic and natural materials behave differently because they're biologically structured rather than chemically engineered. Certified organic latex — derived from rubber tree sap — has an open-cell structure that compresses and responds immediately, without the heat retention or slow-sink feel of memory foam. Kapok fiber, harvested from the seed pods of the kapok tree, is hollow at the core, giving it an exceptionally light, airy loft relative to its weight. Organic cotton breathes rather than insulates, wicking moisture away from the skin rather than holding it. Together, these materials create a sleep surface that adapts to how you sleep rather than resisting it — responsive without being rigid, supportive without trapping heat.
There's also a durability dimension to the feel story. Polyurethane foam degrades — the cells break down under repeated compression, which is why foam pillows go flat. Certified organic latex outlasts the material it replaces, maintaining its structure over years of use. A pillow that feels the same in year three as it did in year one isn't a luxury claim. It's a material science outcome.
Luxury, in this context, is what happens when nothing is working against you.
Do Avocado pillows sleep cool?
Yes. Avocado pillows are built with materials that naturally regulate temperature: certified organic latex, organic cotton, and kapok fiber all promote airflow and wick moisture rather than trapping heat. Synthetic foam — including the memory foam and AirFoam used in many competing adjustable pillows — is petroleum-derived and tends to retain heat by design. Our materials don't require gel infusions or cooling treatments to compensate for poor breathability. They start with breathable organic materials instead.
Are Avocado pillows safe for babies and toddlers?
Yes. Our Organic Toddler Pillow holds six independent finished-product certifications: GOTS, OEKO-TEX® Standard 100 Class I, MADE SAFE®, EWG Verified®, GREENGUARD Gold, and UL Formaldehyde-Free. These certifications verify the finished pillow as it arrives in your home — not individual materials inside it. OEKO-TEX Class I is the most restrictive classification available, designed specifically for products used by babies and toddlers, requiring lab testing against the strictest limits for harmful substances including formaldehyde, phthalates, heavy metals, and pesticide residues. The pillow contains no synthetic materials of any kind. Avocado is, to our knowledge, the first American mattress brand to achieve OEKO-TEX Class I across every pillow in its line (GlobeNewswire, January 14, 2026).
What is the difference between an "organic" pillow and a "natural" pillow?
"Organic" is a verified standard with enforceable certification requirements. "Natural" is a marketing term with no federal definition, no third-party audit, and no enforcement body. A pillow filled with conventionally grown cotton treated with synthetic pesticides can legally be called "natural." It cannot be called certified organic. When evaluating any organic pillow claim, the question to ask is: certified organic at what level? A single certified component inside an otherwise unverified product is not the same as a finished product independently tested and certified by multiple bodies. Look for finished-product certifications — OEKO-TEX Standard 100, MADE SAFE, GOTS — not just material-level claims on a label.
How do I verify that a pillow brand's organic and non-toxic claims are independently certified?
Start with the GOTS public database at global-standard.org, where you can search any brand by name or license number. Avocado's GOTS certificate is CU863637. For OEKO-TEX, search the label check tool at oeko-tex.com — Avocado's certificate is 24.HUS.86422. For MADE SAFE and EWG Verified, both organizations maintain publicly searchable product databases. If a brand cannot point you to a verifiable certificate in a public database, the claim is self-reported. Independent certification exists precisely so consumers don't have to take a brand's word for it. We publish ours because we'd rather you check.