Disclaimer: This article is general education and not a statement about any specific individual experience.
You wait for delivery day, you drag the box inside, you unroll the mattress… and then your stomach drops. A stain you weren’t expecting. A weird smell that feels stronger than “new mattress smell.” A seam that looks off. A lump. A tear. Something just doesn’t look right.
If you’re searching mattress defect on arrival, stain on new mattress, or warranty Canada, you’re probably trying to answer one urgent question:
What do I do first so I don’t mess this up?
This post is a calm, step-by-step triage plan you can follow for any online mattress brand (including brands shoppers compare like Silk & Snow). It’s designed to help you:
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Document correctly
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Avoid common mistakes that slow resolution
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Know what’s normal vs. not
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Get to a fair outcome faster
No drama. Just the right order of operations.
First rule: don’t panic and don’t put bedding on yet
Before you do anything else:
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Don’t add sheets or a protector
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Don’t try to clean a stain yet
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Don’t throw away packaging
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Don’t assume it’s “definitely a defect” or “definitely shipping damage”
Your job in the first 15 minutes is to preserve evidence and create a clean case file.
Step 1: Photograph everything before you touch anything (5 minutes)
This is the single biggest “save” you can make.
Take photos of:
A) The box and label
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Wide photo of the box
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All sides of the box
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Any dents/tears/holes/water marks
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Shipping label (clear and readable)
B) The packaging plastic
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Any rips or punctures
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Any moisture inside the plastic
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Any torn seals
C) The mattress (no bedding)
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Full top surface
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Full bottom surface (if possible)
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Side profile
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Close-ups of the issue (stain/smell source/defect area)
D) The foundation/setup
Yes, even if the issue looks like shipping damage.
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Frame/base overview
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Slats spacing (if slatted)
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Centre support (especially Queen/King)
Pro tip: Turn on your phone flashlight and take photos in good light. Blurry photos are the #1 reason support asks for “one more photo.”
Step 2: Classify the issue type (quick triage)
You don’t need to diagnose perfectly. Just sort it into the right bucket so you know what to do next.
Bucket A: Stain or contamination concern
Examples:
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Yellow/brown mark
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Dark spot
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Smudge that looks like oil/grease
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Anything that makes you think “used” or “dirty”
What to do first: Document, then stop. Don’t clean yet.
Bucket B: Smell concern
Examples:
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Strong chemical odour
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Musty/damp smell
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Smell that feels “sharp” or unusual
What to do first: Document + ventilate (steps below) + note where smell is strongest.
Bucket C: Physical defect concern
Examples:
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Tear, puncture, seam splitting
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Large lump/void that doesn’t change
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Major shape issue
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Cover zipper failure (if applicable)
What to do first: Document + give expansion time if relevant.
Bucket D: Packaging/box damage
Examples:
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Crushed box
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Torn plastic
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Water exposure on box
What to do first: Document immediately packaging evidence matters most for shipping claims.
Step 3: Decide what you should do right now vs. what you should wait on
Things to do immediately (same day)
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Report obvious stains, tears, punctures, or contamination concerns
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Report torn plastic or box damage
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Report anything that suggests moisture exposure
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Save packaging until resolved
Things to wait 24–72 hours before judging
Many mattresses look imperfect while expanding. It can be normal to see:
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Minor waviness in the cover
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Corners not fully formed
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Height not reached immediately
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Slight unevenness early on
Best practice: Take a baseline photo on day 0, then again at 24 and 72 hours. That timeline evidence is powerful.
Step 4: If it’s a smell, use this ventilation protocol (winter-friendly)
Smells are tricky because “new mattress smell” (off-gassing) is common and often temporary but musty or damp smells deserve closer attention.
Ventilation protocol (24 hours)
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Remove all plastic and take it out of the room
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Run a fan across the mattress surface
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Do short fresh-air bursts (5–10 minutes) a few times/day if it’s cold outside
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Keep the mattress uncovered (delay protector if possible)
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Re-check at 24 hours: improving or not?
Smell-mapping tip: Identify where it’s strongest top, bottom, protector, or base. A musty smell from the base can be a setup/humidity issue, not the mattress.
If you suspect moisture risk (musty basement smell), focus on under-bed airflow and room humidity.
Step 5: If it’s a stain, do NOT clean it first
This is counterintuitive, but it matters.
Cleaning can:
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Spread the stain
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Change the appearance
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Make it harder to assess cause
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Create delays if support asks for “original condition” photos
What to do instead
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Photograph stain close-up with a measuring tape (or coin for scale)
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Photograph a wide shot so the stain location is obvious
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Photograph the tag/law label if accessible
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Then contact support with the photos attached
Step 6: If it’s a “defect,” check these basics before you message support
A few quick checks prevent unnecessary back-and-forth:
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Has the mattress had enough time to expand? (take timeline photos)
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Is the issue clearly structural (large void/lump) or cosmetic (cover waviness)?
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Is your foundation supportive and compliant? (slats spacing, centre support)
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Is the issue visible in good lighting, from both close-up and wide shots?
You’re not trying to prove anything you’re trying to make the case easy to understand.
Step 7: Send one clean message (don’t start three threads)
If you want speed, choose one channel (email is usually best) and use one thread.
Copy/paste email template (works for most brands)
Subject: Issue on Arrival – Order #[XXXX] – [Stain / Smell / Defect]
Hello,
My mattress was delivered on [date]. During unboxing, I noticed a [stain / odour / defect] and I’m contacting you promptly for guidance. I’ve attached clear photos of the box/label, packaging, the mattress (wide + close-up), and my foundation setup.
Issue summary (1 sentence): []
What I’m requesting (1 sentence): []
Could you please confirm the next step and expected timeline for resolution?
Thank you,
[Name]
This format prevents the “one photo at a time” email chain.
Step 8: Set realistic resolution expectations (so you don’t spiral)
Every brand has its own process, but here are realistic expectations that reduce anxiety:
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Shipping damage issues may require carrier documentation and pickup coordination
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Stain/contamination concerns often require clear photos and quick review
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Off-gassing odours may come with ventilation guidance and a short observation window
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Defect claims may require expansion time photos and setup verification
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Warranty Canada claims (if the issue appears after use) typically require measurements and base compliance proof
The most important thing: ask for next steps and a timeline in writing.
Haven’s approach: calm triage + documentation + clear next steps
At Haven, our goal is to make support feel predictable and fair. That starts with:
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A simple triage process (what to do first)
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Clean documentation (so you’re not repeating yourself)
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Clear resolution expectations (what happens next + when)
Quick “save this” checklist (do this first)
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Don’t add bedding, don’t clean, don’t toss packaging
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Photograph box/label, packaging, mattress (wide + close-up), base setup
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Smell-map (if odour): top vs bottom vs base
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Ventilate 24 hours if it’s a smell
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Take day 0 + day 1 photos for expansion-related concerns
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Email support in one thread with order # in subject
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Ask for next steps + timeline
A calm process gets you a faster outcome
Weird issues happen. Most are resolvable. The key is responding in the right order: document first, ventilate or wait appropriately, then contact support with a clean case file.
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