The 7 Best Bed Sheets Actually Made in the USA (2026)
Here's an uncomfortable industry secret: most "American" bedding brands are American in headquarters only. The sheets themselves are woven in India, Portugal, or China. These seven makers still do it here — some from the literal seed.
First, a decoding tip you can use anywhere: "designed in," "curated in," and "family-owned in" are not origin claims. Real domestic makers tell you the mill town. When a brand names Thomaston, Georgia or Moulton, Alabama, that specificity is the tell.
Red Land Cotton
The gold standard of traceability: the Hamm family grows the cotton on their own North Alabama farm, then keeps ginning, spinning, weaving, and sewing entirely in the USA. The heirloom percale is crisp, cool-sleeping, and inspired by a 1920s family sheet — durable enough that "buy once" is a business risk they gladly take.
Shop →American Blossom Linens
West Texas cotton woven and sewn by Thomaston Mills, with a published supply-chain map covering roughly a thousand American jobs. Soft, substantial percale with generous sizing and a two-year return policy that tells you everything about their confidence.
Transparency note (2026): the Classic line moved from 100% organic to a 55/45 USA cotton/organic blend due to organic supply constraints — and the brand said so openly. That candor is why they stay high on this list.
Shop →Authenticity 50
The "Seed to Stitch" brand: Supima cotton from California family farms, tracked through Georgia spinning and Carolina weaving. Smooth, hotel-crisp sheets and a 101-night trial. For every five sets sold, one is donated to an American veteran.
Shop →Thomaston Mills
The mill behind American Blossom also sells workhorse sheets under its own name — including easy-care cotton/poly blends that hotels rely on. Not the most luxurious hand on this list, but honest, durable, and American through and through.
Shop →Sheet World
The specialist: standard, crib, RV, boat, and genuinely custom-sized sheets, all cut and sewn in-house in New Jersey. If your mattress is a weird size, this is the American answer.
Shop →CozyPure
GOTS-certified organic cotton sheets cut and sewn in Virginia, deliberately free of the formaldehyde-based wrinkle treatments used on most imported sheets. They arrive slightly wrinkled and proudly so.
Shop →Faribault Mill (toppers & blankets)
Not a sheet maker — but no American bed is complete without a blanket from one of the last vertical woolen mills in the country. Their cotton and wool blankets layer over any set above, and every bed blanket sold funds a donated one for youth experiencing homelessness.
Shop →The brands that only sound American
Boll & Branch: ethical and traceable, but woven and finished in India and Portugal. Brooklinen: manufactured internationally. Brooklyn Bedding: American mattresses, imported sheets. None of these are bad companies — they're just not domestic makers, whatever the brand name whispers.
A note on thread count
Ignore the arms race. A 200–400 count sheet in long-staple American Supima or quality upland cotton will outsleep a 1,000-count sheet spun from short imported fiber. Fiber quality and weave beat the number on the package, every time.
Every origin above passed our verification process in July 2026. Supply chains move — when they do, this page will say so.