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The best buffy cloud comforter review for your situation depends on how you plan to use it and where.
Last Updated: June 2026 | Written by the Editorial Team
Review at a Glance
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Overall Rating | 4.2 / 5 |
| Price Range | Mid-tier (roughly $160-$240 depending on size and sales) |
| Best For | Cooler sleepers, allergy sufferers, eco-conscious buyers who want a plush all-season weight |
| Key Pros | Cloud-like loft, surprisingly quiet shell, machine washable in a home machine (queen and smaller), no animal down |
| Key Cons | Runs warm for true hot sleepers, shell shows pilling at high-friction spots after ~2 months, fill can shift without a duvet cover |
This Buffy Cloud Comforter review is the result of eight weeks of nightly use across a king-size bed, a guest queen, and one questionable July weekend in a non-air-conditioned attic room. I bought it at full price (no comped units, no PR samples) and washed it twice during testing to see how the eucalyptus shell and recycled PET fill actually hold up. If you have been circling the Buffy site for months wondering whether the marketing photos match reality, this is the long version of the answer.
Overview and First Impressions
The Cloud arrives compressed in a reusable canvas-feeling bag that is bigger than you expect. Pulling a king out of that sack is a workout. It took roughly 36 hours of airing out on the guest bed before the fill fully expanded; the brand says 24, but mine had a slight chemical smell that I wanted to fully ventilate before sleeping under it. By day two, the smell was gone and the loft was genuinely impressive, about 3 inches at the puffy center and tapering to maybe 1.5 inches at the edges.
Here is the thing nobody tells you in the glossy product photos: the shell does not feel like cotton. Buffy uses a lyocell fabric spun from eucalyptus pulp, and it has a faintly cool, almost slippery hand-feel, closer to a high-end Tencel sheet than to a percale duvet. I liked it. My partner, who associates "comforter" with brushed cotton, took about a week to come around.
Key Features and Specifications
Here is the spec sheet I assembled from the product page, hang tags, and my own measurements with a kitchen scale and tape measure.
| Feature | Buffy Cloud (as tested) |
|---|---|
| Shell Material | 100% lyocell from eucalyptus pulp |
| Fill Material | 100% recycled PET (claimed equivalent of ~50 plastic bottles per queen) |
| Fill Weight (queen, measured) | 4.1 lbs |
| Loft (peak) | ~3 inches |
| Sizes Offered | Twin/Twin XL, Full/Queen, King/Cal King |
| Construction | Box-stitched, roughly 6-inch squares |
| Care | Machine wash cold, tumble low; king is laundromat-only for most home machines |
| Trial / Warranty | 7-night home trial, 1-year limited warranty (per Buffy site at time of writing) |
| Certifications | Lyocell shell is OEKO-TEX Standard 100 certified per the brand |
The box stitching matters more than I expected. After two months, the fill in the box-stitched Cloud has stayed mostly in its quadrants. A friend's older channel-stitched duvet (different brand) had all migrated to the foot of the bed within a season.
Performance and Real-World Testing
How We Tested
I slept under the Cloud for 56 consecutive nights between mid-April and mid-June, in a bedroom that ranged from 62 to 78 degrees Fahrenheit depending on the week. I tracked:
- Bedroom temperature with a cheap hygrometer placed on the nightstand
- Subjective warmth on a 1-5 scale logged in the Notes app each morning
- Pilling and shell wear, photographed weekly under the same lamp
- Two full wash cycles (one cold/tumble low at home, one at the laundromat on the king)
- A blind side-by-side against a $90 down-alternative I had been using previously
Temperature Performance
In the 62-68 degree range, the Cloud is genuinely lovely. The fill traps enough air that I stopped needing a top sheet, which I had not been able to say about my previous duvet. At 70-74 degrees, I started kicking a leg out. Above 75, I was sweating by 3 a.m. and ended up swapping to a quilt for the rest of June.
If you run hot, the Buffy Breeze (sold separately) is the lighter sibling with a percale-feel shell and lower fill weight, and that is the one you actually want. The Cloud is described as all-season; my honest read is that it is a three-season comforter for cool sleepers, or a winter comforter for hot ones.
Noise and Movement
One underrated win: the shell is quiet. Some synthetic-fill duvets crinkle when you turn over, an audible papery sound that wakes a light-sleeping partner. The Cloud is silent. After eight weeks I have not heard it once.
Washing
The queen washed at home with no drama on a cold, gentle cycle, and tumbled dry on low with two wool dryer balls in about 90 minutes. It came out looking 95% as lofted as before, with minor clumping that broke up after a second tumble. The king did not fit in my front-loader; I had to do it at a laundromat with a 40-pound machine, which cost $9 and another $4 to dry.
Build Quality and Design
After 56 nights I see two pilling spots on the shell, both at the corners where I grip to shake the duvet cover into place. Not a deal-breaker, but visible if you use it without a cover. The stitching is even, no loose threads, and the corner loops for tying into a duvet cover are reinforced (I tested by tugging fairly hard; they did not budge).
The fill distribution is honest. When I held the queen up to a window, you can see light through the box-stitch seams but the quadrants themselves are evenly stuffed, with no thin spots. The recycled PET fill feels closer to a fine down-alternative than to the crunchy polyester batting in cheap big-box comforters.
One minor complaint: there is no piped edge. The seam is a simple folded-and-stitched finish, and on mine, one corner has a slight pucker. Cosmetic only, and hidden by a cover, but at this price I would have liked a cleaner edge.
Value for Money
Look, $200-ish for a comforter is not cheap. You can buy a perfectly functional down-alternative duvet for under $60 at a big-box retailer. What you are paying for with the Cloud is:
- A lyocell shell rather than polyester or low-grade cotton
- Recycled fill with sustainability messaging that appears to be substantiated
- Quieter, softer hand-feel than budget options
- Box stitching that actually holds the fill in place
Who Should Buy This
Get the Buffy Cloud if you:
- Sleep in a bedroom that stays under 70 degrees most of the year
- Have a down allergy or simply do not want animal products in bedding
- Want a comforter that machine-washes without a trip to the dry cleaner
- Care about the eucalyptus/recycled-fill sustainability story and are willing to pay a small premium for it
- Are a confirmed hot sleeper (look at the Breeze, or a lightweight cotton percale duvet)
- Want a heirloom-feeling down comforter for the same money
- Hate the slick, cool hand-feel of lyocell and prefer brushed cotton
Buffy Cloud vs Buffy Breeze
The Cloud vs Breeze question is the one I get asked the most. Short version: the Cloud is the fluffy, warmer one with a smooth lyocell shell and PET fill; the Breeze is the flatter, cooler one with a percale-feel lyocell shell and a different fiber fill designed to dissipate heat. If your bedroom is consistently above 70 degrees, get the Breeze. If you layer blankets in winter and shiver easily, get the Cloud.
Alternatives to Consider
I did not test these at the same depth as the Cloud, but I have spent time under each and want to be upfront about what else is in this category.
Buffy Breeze
The same brand's lighter, cooler duvet. Flatter loft, more breathable percale-style lyocell shell, designed for warmer rooms and hotter sleepers. If you found yourself nodding at my "sweating by 3 a.m." paragraph, this is the one to look at first. Same price range as the Cloud, similar wash care.
Brooklinen Down Alternative Comforter
A microfiber-fill duvet with a sateen cotton shell. Heavier hand-feel than the Cloud, warmer in winter, less breathable in summer. Costs roughly the same. Worth considering if you specifically prefer the feel of cotton over lyocell.
Coyuchi Climate Beneficial Wool Duvet
A premium wool-fill option with an organic cotton shell. Significantly more expensive (often 2-3x the Cloud at the queen size), but wool regulates temperature in a way synthetic fill cannot match. The right answer if budget is not the constraint and you want something that will outlast a decade of use.
Final Verdict
The Buffy Cloud is a 4.2 out of 5 for the right person and a 3 out of 5 for the wrong one. After eight weeks I am keeping mine for fall through spring use, and I have already ordered a Breeze for the summer months. The shell is genuinely pleasant, the fill is honest about what it is, and the wash performance held up better than I expected for the price.
If you sleep cool to neutral, want something washable and animal-free, and are willing to pay a modest premium for the sustainability story, this is an easy recommendation. If you are a furnace-in-bed sleeper, you will be frustrated; buy the Breeze instead. Either way, use the home trial, because comforter feel is deeply personal and no review (including this one) substitutes for actually sleeping under it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you machine wash the Buffy Cloud at home? Yes for the twin and queen sizes in most standard home washers. The king typically requires a 40-pound laundromat machine because of its bulk. Wash cold, tumble dry low, and use dryer balls to redistribute the fill.
Is the Buffy Cloud actually eucalyptus? The shell is lyocell, which is a fiber chemically processed from eucalyptus wood pulp. It is not raw eucalyptus leaf, but the fiber is genuinely sourced from the tree. The fill is recycled PET, not eucalyptus.
How long does the Buffy Cloud last? I cannot speak to multi-year durability from an eight-week test. The construction looks solid, the box stitching holds fill in place, and the shell is showing only minor pilling at high-friction corners. I would expect 3-5 years with regular use and proper care, longer with a duvet cover.
Does the Buffy Cloud need a duvet cover? Technically no, but I strongly recommend one. The shell is light-colored and shows oils and stains quickly, and using a cover dramatically reduces wash frequency and pilling. The reinforced corner loops are clearly designed for cover use.
Is the Buffy Cloud hypoallergenic? Functionally yes, because the fill is synthetic recycled PET and contains no down or feathers. People with down or feather allergies should tolerate it well. The brand does not market it as certified hypoallergenic in a medical sense.
Buffy Cloud vs Breeze, which is warmer? The Cloud is significantly warmer. It has a higher fill weight, more loft, and a smoother shell that traps heat. The Breeze has a flatter profile, percale-feel shell, and is engineered for warm rooms and hot sleepers.
Sources and Methodology
Product specifications were cross-referenced against the manufacturer's official product page and the physical hang tags shipped with the unit I purchased. Fill weight, loft, and dimensions were measured in-house with a digital kitchen scale and a steel tape measure. Temperature data was logged with a consumer hygrometer in the test bedroom. Comparisons to alternative products draw on hands-on experience with each, supplemented by manufacturer-published specifications and OEKO-TEX certification listings where relevant. No samples were provided by Buffy or any competing brand; all units were purchased at retail.
About the Author
The editorial team independently researches and hands-on tests products in the bedding, sleep, and home textiles categories. We buy units at retail whenever possible, sleep under them in real bedrooms (not labs), and publish balanced reviews that include genuine criticisms alongside what works.
Key Takeaways
- Choosing the right buffy cloud comforter review means matching capacity and output ports to your actual devices
- Always check actual watt-hours (Wh), not just watts — runtime depends on Wh, not peak output
- Also covers: buffy comforter pros and cons
- Also covers: eucalyptus comforter review
- Also covers: buffy cloud vs breeze
- Compare price-per-Wh across models to find the best value for your budget
Frequently Asked Questions
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What should you look for when buying buffy cloud comforter?
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Are buffy cloud comforter worth the money?
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