Sheets are a category full of nonsense marketing. Thread count numbers are meaningless past 400 (manufacturers double- and triple-count fibers to inflate numbers). "Egyptian cotton" labels are frequently false. "Bamboo" sheets vary wildly by manufacturing process. Here's what actually matters: the weight of the fabric, the weave type, and whether the brand has a track record. These sheets have all three.
This isn't a cop-out recommendation. Amazon Basics microfiber sheets consistently outperform sheets at 2โ3x the price in feel, durability, and wrinkle resistance. They're not crisp or luxurious โ they're soft, warm, and stay looking new after 50 washes. For anyone who just wants comfortable sheets without obsessing over it, this is the answer.

Percale is the weave that produces crisp, cool, hotel-bed sheets. Parachute's Classic Percale uses long-staple cotton, is OEKO-TEX certified (no harmful chemicals), and gets better with every wash. If you run hot or want that "staying in a nice hotel" feeling, percale is your answer and Parachute is the best value in the category at $99 for a queen set.
One warning: percale wrinkles. This is a property of the weave, not a defect. Either embrace the lived-in look or stick with sateen if wrinkle-free matters to you.
Sateen weave produces a silkier, warmer feel with a subtle sheen. Brooklinen's Luxe Sateen is 480 thread count long-staple cotton โ actually legitimate, not inflated. These are the sheets people are talking about when they say "I finally understand why people spend money on sheets." They're $149 for a queen, which is above budget here, but they go on sale multiple times a year and are worth waiting for.

Bamboo sheets done right are genuinely excellent โ temperature-regulating, moisture-wicking, incredibly soft, and more sustainable than cotton. The key is the manufacturing process: lyocell/TENCEL processing (closed-loop, low chemical) produces a better product than "viscose" or "rayon from bamboo" (which are essentially the same thing made with harsh chemicals). Ettitude uses lyocell. Most cheap bamboo sheets don't.

Nothing above 400. Above that number, manufacturers split individual threads to count each strand separately, producing inflated numbers that don't reflect quality. A quality 200TC percale sheet will sleep better than a cheap 1,200TC sheet. Focus on: fiber type (long-staple cotton or bamboo lyocell), weave type (percale for cool/crisp, sateen for warm/soft), and OEKO-TEX certification (no harmful chemicals).
Percale-weave cotton (like Parachute Classic Percale) or bamboo lyocell sheets (like Ettitude). Sateen and microfiber trap heat. Linen is even cooler than percale but more expensive.
Every 2โ3 years with regular use and proper washing. Signs it's time: pilling, thinning fabric, elastics that don't hold, persistent smell after washing.
Yes, but it flattens out above $100โ150 for a queen set. The jump from $20 to $80 is significant. The jump from $150 to $400 is mostly diminishing returns and brand premium.
It means the fabric has been tested for 100+ harmful substances (pesticides, heavy metals, dyes) and certified free of them. Worth looking for, especially for anything touching your skin all night.