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Spraying, washing sheets, and checking the bed frame does not seal the mattress. If your mattress isn’t fully encased on all six sides, the seams, sides, underside, and closure point may still be exposed.
By James Drews, Certified Pest Control Expert · Updated July 2nd

I’ll keep this blunt, because bed bugs don’t reward polite. When people deal with bed bugs, they go after the parts of the room they can see. The floor. The baseboards. The frame. The laundry. And they usually go after them hard.
I’m not saying people are lazy. I’m saying they are usually focused on the obvious parts of the room while the mattress stays open.
That’s the pattern I see over and over. Someone throws everything they have at the room, feels like they’ve finally done the work, and never actually seals the one object they spend seven or eight hours a night lying on top of.
This isn’t a lecture and it isn’t a sales pitch dressed up as advice. It’s a warning about the single most common gap I run into — and, unlike most of this problem, it’s one you can actually close today.
You can treat everything around the bed and still leave the bed itself wide open.
You don’t need every one of these to be at risk. One or two is enough to take the mattress seriously.
If you recognised yourself in even a couple of those, the mattress is very likely the weak point you haven’t closed yet.

Here’s the trap. People think they treated the bed. What they actually did was treat around the bed.
They sprayed the frame. They vacuumed the base. They lifted the mattress, looked underneath, maybe hit a couple of seams with something, and dropped it back down. Then they made it up with clean sheets and told themselves it was handled.
But an open mattress doesn’t care that the room around it got treated. It still has seams running along every edge. It still has corners, folds, a quilted top, and an underside you never look at. And if you’ve got a cheap cover on it, it still has a closure point.
Every one of those is somewhere that’s hard to reach, hard to inspect, and easy to miss.
Treating around the mattress is not the same as sealing the mattress.
That’s the whole difference between feeling like you handled it and actually closing the gap.
This is where most people lose, so I want to slow down and be specific about it.
A fitted sheet only sits on top. It’s fabric laid over the sleeping surface. It doesn’t wrap the sides, it doesn’t reach the bottom, and it comes off every single week. A fitted sheet does not seal anything.
A basic protector is built for spills. Its whole job is to stop liquid from soaking into the mattress. That’s genuinely useful — but spill protection and six-sided sealing are two completely different things.
Top-only coverage leaves the sides and bottom exposed. If something can reach an edge or the underside, a cover that only handles the sleeping surface does nothing about it.
Even a cheap zipped cover can miss the point that matters most: the closure. If the zipper end isn’t guarded, that’s a gap — and a gap is all it takes for a cover to quietly stop doing its job.
Covering the sleeping surface is not the same as sealing all six sides.
So when someone tells me “I already put a cover on it,” my first question is always the same: does it seal all six sides, and is the closure point guarded? Most of the time, the honest answer is no.
Think about what a mattress actually is. It’s a large object, full of seams and internal space, sitting right next to a warm body for hours every night. From a hiding standpoint, that’s about as good as it gets.
The inside and the seams of a mattress are exactly the kind of place that’s difficult to treat and nearly impossible to inspect properly once there’s a problem. You can’t spray the inside of a seam the way you wipe down a floor.
It’s also the single most expensive item in most bedrooms. People will throw out clothes, bag books, and drag a cheap headboard to the curb without a second thought. The mattress is the thing they’re genuinely afraid of losing.
The mattress is the most expensive, hardest-to-inspect object in the room — and it’s the one people leave open.
Here’s what leaving the mattress open can actually cost you. I’m not saying this to scare you — I’m saying it because I watch it happen.
Repeat sprays. You keep going back to the same cans, treating the same room, because something keeps surviving in a spot you can’t reach.
Repeat treatment. If you paid a professional, an exposed mattress can quietly undercut the work and pull you back toward a second round.
The mattress-replacement fear. That nagging thought that you might have to spend more than a thousand — to replace a bed you already own.
And the part nobody talks about: the feeling that your bedroom is never really secure. Checking the sheets every night. Never fully exhaling in the one room you’re supposed to rest in.
None of that is guaranteed to happen, and I won’t pretend it is. But every bit of it becomes more likely when the mattress stays open as the one variable you never closed.
Once someone understands that the mattress is the open variable, the fix is refreshingly simple: stop leaving it open.
That’s the entire idea behind LullaLock. It is not a spray, and it is not a cure. It’s a six-sided bed bug mattress encasement designed to seal the mattress, trap bugs already inside away from feeding access, and help block new bugs from entering the mattress.

closes the gap treatment leaves behind — the mattress itself — so the bed stops being the part of the room nobody sealed.
The mattress needs to be locked down, not just covered.

1. Six-Sided Coverage
Six-sided means exactly that: top, bottom, and all four sides, fully enclosed. Not a sheet on top. Not a panel over the sleeping surface. The whole mattress, wrapped and closed.
This matters because the parts of a mattress that are hardest to inspect — the underside, the edges, the corners — are the exact parts a top cover never touches. Sealing all six sides takes those hiding spots off the table in a single move.
When the mattress is fully enclosed, it stops being a maze of accessible seams and becomes one closed surface you can actually keep an eye on.
2. Full Zipper Closure
A full-perimeter zipper is what turns a loose cover into a sealed one. It runs the length of the encasement so the mattress can be zipped completely shut instead of left open along an edge.
An open edge is a gap, and a gap defeats the entire point. The closure is what lets the encasement do its job rather than just drape over the mattress like an oversized sheet.
3. Zipper Guard
Here’s the detail most people never think about until it fails them: the closure point. On a lot of cheaper covers, the very end of the zipper is a weak spot — a small opening sitting right where the seal is supposed to be strongest.
A zipper guard is a flap that covers that closure point. It’s a small feature that addresses the exact place I see basic covers fall short.
If you take one thing away from the mechanics, take this: the guarded closure is the difference between a cover that looks sealed and one that actually is.
4. White Inspection Surface
A plain white surface isn’t about looks. On a dark mattress, early signs are almost invisible until the problem is already large. On white, the same signs stand out.
That means you can inspect the bed at a glance instead of guessing. Spotting something early is the difference between catching a small problem and discovering one that’s gotten out of hand.
It doesn’t just cover the mattress. It seals the mattress.
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Does this kill bed bugs?
No. It is not a chemical treatment and it doesn’t kill anything. It seals the mattress. Locks bed bugs in, Locks bed bugs out
What if bugs are elsewhere?
They can be, and often are. That’s why this doesn’t replace treatment. It closes one major vulnerable zone — the mattress — so it stops being a place they can use.
Why use this if I already sprayed?
Because spray only reaches surfaces it can physically contact. It doesn’t seal the inside of a mattress or its closure point. The encasement handles the part the spray can’t.
Why use this after treatment?
Because the mattress shouldn’t go back to being open the moment the exterminator leaves. Sealing it helps protect the work you already paid for.
Is this just a mattress protector?
No. A protector sits on top and stops spills. LullaLock is designed specifically for Bed Bugs, encases all six sides and guards the closure point. It’s a different job entirely.
Why does the zipper guard matter?
Because the closure point is the most common weak spot on a zipped cover. Guarding it is what keeps the seal from having an obvious gap.
Can I still use sheets over it?
Yes. It goes directly on the mattress, and your normal sheets and bedding go over it as usual. You won’t be sleeping on bare encasement.
How long does it take to install?
Usually a few minutes. Stand the mattress up, work the encasement over it, zip it shut, and close the guard. A second person makes a larger mattress easier.
🛡️ 30-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Put it on. If it’s not right for you, send it back within 30 days.
🧼 Machine Washable
Take it off, wash it, put it back on. No special handling drama.
🤫 No Crinkle, No Plastic Feel
It shouldn’t sound or feel like a tarp under your sheets.
📐 Multiple Sizes
Twin through California King. Check the size chart for your mattress depth.
🔎 White Inspection Surface
A plain white surface makes it easier to spot signs early.

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If you have seen signs, sprayed, cleaned, or started treatment, do not leave the mattress as the one open variable in the room.
A mattress is either sealed or exposed, and right now, YOURS is exposed
You’ve already done the hard, unpleasant work on everything else. This is the part that’s actually simple to close — so close it.
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THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT AND NOT AN ACTUAL NEWS ARTICLE, BLOG, OR CONSUMER PROTECTION UPDATE. Contributor commentary reflects the author’s opinion. LullaLock is a mattress encasement. It is not a pesticide, treatment, or cure, it does not kill bed bugs, and it is not a substitute for professional pest control. Results vary. Use as part of a wider bed bug response.