Sources: Statista ·
HKTDC / NielsenIQ 2025 ·
Emergen Research ·
Straits Research 2026 ·
US Chamber of Commerce
📋 Understanding the numbers: why “sleep economy” figures vary
You will encounter a wide range of market size figures for the “sleep economy” — from $46 billion to $585 billion to $1 trillion. This is not error; it reflects scope differences. Narrow measures cover only mattresses and bedding. Broad measures (like the Statista/McKinsey $585 billion figure used as the primary reference in this article) encompass the full ecosystem: mattresses, bedding, supplements, wearables, sleep apps, pharmaceuticals, sleep clinics, hospitality sleep programs, and white noise machines. The narrower “mattress-only” market was valued at $46.48 billion in 2024 (Grand View Research). The broad sleep economy was $585 billion in 2024 (Statista). We present both throughout, clearly labelled.
There is a new consumer category that did not meaningfully exist as a unified market fifteen years ago. It has no single product. It spans bedroom furniture, pharmaceutical tablets, wrist-worn sensors, smartphone applications, hotel room design, and guided meditation audio. It is called the sleep economy — and in 2024, it was worth $585 billion globally.
The term was coined — or at least popularised — by the Sleep Foundation, which defines it as the ecosystem of products, services, and technologies connected to improving sleep quality. What makes the sleep economy remarkable as a market category is its sheer breadth and the speed of its emergence: in 2019 it was valued at $432 billion; by 2024 it had grown to $585 billion; by 2033, leading research houses project it will surpass $1 trillion.
This article is the most comprehensive free reference available for sleep economy market data. It covers the headline market trajectory, every major sub-sector with its own market value, regional breakdown, the key drivers, the controversies, and what the data means for consumers making purchasing decisions — particularly around the single most evidence-backed purchase in the entire sleep economy: the mattress.
1. The Growth Trajectory: From $432 Billion to $1 Trillion
The growth of the sleep economy over the past six years is one of the most striking stories in global consumer markets. Here is the trajectory, with sources for each data point:
2. The Sleep Economy’s Sub-Sectors: Every Market Mapped

The sleep economy is not one industry. It is a convergence of at least eight distinct market categories — each with its own dynamics, competitive landscape, and growth trajectory. Here is the complete map.
Sleep Economy Sub-Sectors — Market Share of Broad $585B Total (2024)
Sources: Emergen Research; HKTDC / NielsenIQ 2025; individual sub-sector reports
~34–35% ← Largest segment
Mattresses, pillows, bedding, and toppers. The largest single sub-sector by revenue. The $46.48B “mattress-only” figure is a component of this broader category, which includes premium bedding, ergonomic pillows ($2.5B), and luxury linen ($4.7B).
~18–20%
OTC sleep aids (melatonin: $900M US alone), prescription medications (zolpidem, etc.), CBD sleep products, herbal supplements. US sleep supplement market: $3.8B in 2023, growing ~10%/yr.
~12–15% | $13.5B alone
CPAP/BiPAP machines, oral appliances, surgery. The sleep apnea devices market alone: $13.5B in 2024. Driven by rising OSA diagnosis rates — currently 80–90% of OSA cases remain undiagnosed globally, representing future demand. Philips and ResMed are market leaders.
~8% ↑ Fastest growing (15.5% CAGR)
Sleep trackers, smart mattresses, smart rings (Oura), white noise machines. Global sleep tech market: $27B in 2025, projected $114B by 2035 at 15.5% CAGR (HKTDC). Wearables account for 75.7% of sleep tech market in 2024.
~5–6% | High growth
Calm (100M+ downloads, $2B valuation), Headspace, Sleepio, SleepScore. CBT-I digital platforms (clinically validated cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia) are the highest-evidence digital sleep tools. Subscription-based revenue model growing rapidly.
~4–5% | $750M niche
Hotels with dedicated sleep programs, retreat centres, sleep clinics. Grand View Research estimates North American sleep tourism at $331.2B by 2030. 91% of travelers willing to pay a premium for sleep-enhancing accommodations. Hyatt, Park Hyatt, Six Senses all have formalised sleep programs.
~8–10%
Sleep study labs, polysomnography, sleep medicine specialist practices, home sleep tests. Growing as OSA diagnosis rates improve and payer coverage expands. The global market for sleep aid technologies (clinical focus): $103.5B in 2025 (BCC Research).
Segment shares are approximate estimates based on sub-sector market values relative to the $585B broad total. Exact shares vary by research methodology.
Note: percentages do not sum precisely to 100% as the “remaining” category includes niche products (weighted blankets, aromatherapy, blue-light glasses, etc.) that together account for an estimated 5–8% of the broad sleep economy.
3. Sub-Sector Deep Dives: Key Statistics for Each Category
4. Regional Breakdown: North America Leads, Asia-Pacific Surges
| Region | Market Share 2024 | CAGR Forecast | Key Drivers |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🌎 North America | ~40% | Strong | US sleep market $54B (2025, Straits Research). US mattress industry doubled 2015–2020. 35%+ adults chronically sleep-deprived. Premium and smart mattress adoption. DTC e-commerce boom. |
| 🌏 Asia-Pacific | ~23% ↑ Fastest | 10.5% CAGR | China (JD Health, Alibaba), India (rising OSA diagnosis), Japan (karoshi culture driving corporate sleep programs), South Korea, Australia. Urbanisation creating first-time mattress buyers by the hundreds of millions. |
| 🌍 Europe | ~24% | Moderate | Aging demographics, eco-certified product preference, strong DTC brands (Emma Sleep). Germany, UK, France primary markets. Nordic countries lead in sleep health awareness. |
| 🌍 MEA (incl. South Africa) | ~6% | Above average | South Africa is MEA’s largest mattress market. UAE and Saudi Arabia growing in hospitality sleep. Growing middle class expanding addressable market across the region. |
Sources: Straits Research 2026; Emergen Research
5. What Is Driving the Sleep Economy’s Growth
The medicalisation of sleep
Sleep has shifted from a personal habit to a clinical health indicator. The CDC’s declaration of insufficient sleep as a “public health problem” legitimised the category. Medical research linking poor sleep to cardiovascular disease, dementia, obesity, and immune dysfunction has made sleep investment feel medically rational, not merely aspirational.
Sleep anxiety and the quantified self
40%
of Gen Z report “sleep anxiety” (HKTDC 2025)
Growing awareness of sleep’s importance has paradoxically increased anxiety about not sleeping well. The wearable revolution gives consumers data — and data creates engagement. Sleep tracker users track, compare, and purchase to improve scores. One study (Nature Human Behaviour 2022) found 35% of wearable sleep tracker users develop “orthosomnia” — excessive focus on sleep data that can worsen insomnia.
Ageing demographics
Older adults experience higher rates of sleep disorders, more chronic pain affecting sleep, and greater awareness of health. Europe, with one of the world’s fastest-aging populations, is a specifically strong driver of premium mattress, sleep medication, and sleep apnea device demand. By 2030, approximately 1 in 5 Europeans will be 65+.
Global urbanisation
Each newly formed urban household is a new consumer for every sleep economy sub-sector simultaneously — a mattress, potential supplements, and an entry-level wearable. The UN projects 68% of the global population will be urban by 2050. Asia-Pacific’s extraordinary 10.5% CAGR is essentially urbanisation at scale creating consumer demand.
Rising willingness to invest
55%
of global consumers prepared to invest more in sleep (NielsenIQ 2025)
63% of consumers globally now prioritise getting quality sleep more than they did five years ago (NielsenIQ 2025 survey of 19,000 respondents). Sleep is increasingly framed as performance optimisation, not just health — driven by athletes, executives, and biohackers who publicly discuss their sleep routines.
AI and personalisation
AI-powered sleep coaching (Bryte Balance mattress at Park Hyatt), AI-driven sleep analysis (Eight Sleep’s HRV correlation), and machine learning personalisation of CBT-I delivery (Sleepio, Somryst) are rapidly expanding what the sleep economy can deliver — and at what price point.
6. Complete Quick-Reference Sleep Economy Statistics Table
| Statistic | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Global sleep economy (broad), 2019 | $432B | Statista |
| Global sleep economy (broad), 2024 | $585B | Statista / McKinsey 2023 |
| Global sleep economy projected, 2028 | $800B | McKinsey, 2023 |
| Global sleep economy projected, 2033 | $1T+ | HKTDC 2025 |
| Global mattress market (narrow), 2024 | $46.48B | Grand View Research |
| Sleep apnea devices market, 2024 | $13.5B | Roots Analysis / Sleep Foundation |
| Sleep tech devices market, 2025 | $27B | HKTDC / NielsenIQ |
| Sleep tech devices CAGR (2025–2035) | 15.5% | HKTDC |
| Sleep tech devices projected, 2035 | $114B | HKTDC |
| US sleep supplement market, 2023 | $3.8B | Multiple industry sources |
| US melatonin sales alone | $900M | Industry retail data |
| Smart mattress market, 2024 | $1.8B | Grand View Research / US Chamber |
| Smart mattress market projected, 2030 | $2.5B | Grand View Research |
| White noise machine market, 2024 | $1.5B | HKTDC |
| Ergonomic pillow segment, 2024 | $2.5B | HKTDC / NSF |
| Luxury bedroom linen market, 2024 | $4.7B | HKTDC |
| Global sleep tourism market (niche) | $750M | Multiple wellness travel analysts |
| Apple Watch sleep tracker users | 50M+ | Industry data, 2026 |
| Wearables’ share of sleep tech market | 75.7% | Amra & Elma 2024 |
| Consumers globally prioritising sleep more (5yr) | 63% | NielsenIQ 2025 (19,000 respondents) |
| Travelers willing to pay premium for sleep-enhancing stays | 91% | HKTDC 2025 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the global sleep economy market size in 2024?
The global sleep economy was valued at approximately $585 billion in 2024, according to Statista and McKinsey’s 2023 analysis. This broad figure encompasses the complete ecosystem: mattresses and bedding, sleep supplements and medications, sleep apnea devices, sleep technology and wearables, sleep apps, sleep clinics, and sleep tourism. A narrower “mattress-only” measure puts the global mattress market at $46.48 billion in 2024 (Grand View Research). Both figures are frequently cited — the difference reflects scope, not error.
How big will the sleep economy be by 2030 and 2033?
McKinsey’s 2023 analysis projected the sleep economy will reach $800 billion by 2028. The HKTDC/NielsenIQ 2025 report forecasts the broader sleep economy will surpass $1 trillion by 2033. Growing at approximately 6.3% CAGR (Statista/McKinsey baseline), the $1 trillion milestone is plausible even on conservative assumptions. The sleep technology sub-sector has a much faster CAGR of 15.5% (HKTDC), which will drive above-average growth in the total.
What is the fastest-growing sub-sector in the sleep economy?
Sleep technology and wearables is the fastest-growing sub-sector, with a CAGR of 15.5% through 2035 (HKTDC/NielsenIQ). The global sleep tech market was $27 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach $114 billion by 2035. Wearables (Oura Ring, Apple Watch, Garmin) account for 75.7% of sleep tech market revenue. Within wearables, smart rings are the fastest-growing form factor, with the global smart ring market expected to grow at double-digit rates.
Which region leads the sleep economy?
North America leads with approximately 40% of global sleep economy revenue, with the US market alone valued at $54 billion in 2025 (Straits Research). Asia-Pacific is the fastest-growing region at 10.5% CAGR, driven primarily by China and India’s urbanisation and a rapidly expanding middle class. South Africa is the largest sleep economy market in the Middle East and Africa region.
What does “sleep economy” mean and what does it include?
The sleep economy is defined by the Sleep Foundation as the ecosystem of products, services, and technologies connected to improving sleep quality. It encompasses: mattresses and bedding; sleep supplements and medications; sleep apnea and medical devices; wearable sleep trackers; sleep apps and digital platforms; sleep clinics and home sleep tests; sleep tourism and hotel sleep programs; and ambient sleep products (white noise machines, weighted blankets, aromatherapy). Three core components were identified by Emergen Research: ambiance adjustment (bedding, lighting, temperature), routine management (apps, monitoring), and therapeutic treatment (medication, devices).
All Sources — Global Sleep Economy 2024–2026
- Statista — Size of the Sleep Economy Worldwide, 2019–2024 (★ Primary reference for headline figures)
- HKTDC / NielsenIQ — The Business of Better Rest: A Buyer’s Guide to the Global Sleep Health Revolution (December 2025)
- Emergen Research — Sleep Economy or Sleep Aids Market Size, Share, Industry Forecast 2024–2033
- Straits Research — Sleep Market Size, Demand, Scope & Top Players by 2034 (March 2026)
- Sleep Foundation — 2024 Projected to Be Biggest Year Yet for Sleep Industry
- US Chamber of Commerce — The Business of Better Rest: The Sleep Market (December 2025)
- Amra & Elma — Top 20 Sleep Platform Marketing Statistics 2025
- Grand View Research — Global Mattress Market Size & Growth, 2030
- BCC Research — Global Sleep Aids Market Size, Share and Growth Study 2030
- Sloom — 2025 National Sleep Census (South African sleep data)
- Beds and All — South African Bed and Mattress Specialists
Update schedule: This article is updated annually when new primary market data is published. Next update: April 2027. The headline $585B figure (Statista/McKinsey 2023) will be revised when 2025 full-year data is incorporated. All sub-sector projections reflect the most recent available research house forecasts as of April 2026.
Disclaimer: market figures vary significantly across research houses due to differences in scope definition, methodology, and geographic coverage. This article presents figures transparently with their sources. It does not constitute investment advice.
