Egyptian cotton. Supima. Pima. These names appear on premium bedding labels like badges of honor. But what do they actually mean? Are they different species? Different qualities? Different marketing terms? Here's the honest breakdown.
They're all the same species
Egyptian cotton, Supima, and Pima are all varieties of Gossypium barbadense — the "extra-long staple" cotton species. They share the same genetic heritage (descended from Sea Island cotton, originally cultivated in the Caribbean). The differences between them come from where they're grown, how they're regulated, and what quality controls exist.
Egyptian cotton
Egyptian cotton is Gossypium barbadense grown in Egypt, primarily in the Nile Delta region. The Nile's unique conditions — rich alluvial soil, hot days, cool nights, and controlled irrigation — produce some of the longest, finest, and strongest cotton fibers in the world.
The most famous grades are numbered by variety:
- Giza 45: The rarest and finest. Extremely long staple, incredibly soft. Reserved for the most expensive textiles in the world. Production is tiny.
- Giza 86 and 87: Widely used in luxury sheeting. Long-staple, excellent quality, much more available than Giza 45.
- Giza 90 and above: Good quality but shorter staple. Still superior to most commodity cotton.
The challenge with "Egyptian cotton" as a label is that Egypt also grows shorter-staple varieties. "Egyptian cotton" on a label doesn't automatically mean the highest quality — it just means it was grown in Egypt. The grade matters.
Supima®
Supima® stands for "Superior Pima." It's American extra-long staple cotton, grown primarily in California, Arizona, New Mexico, and West Texas. The Supima® trademark is managed by a non-profit organization that enforces strict quality standards and traceability — every bale of Supima® cotton can be traced back to the farm it came from.
Key facts about Supima®:
- Only about 3% of the cotton grown in the U.S. qualifies
- Staple length must exceed 1.3 inches (34mm)
- Certified and traceable through the entire supply chain
- Licensed by the Supima® organization — manufacturers must be authorized to use the trademark
Supima® is the most quality-controlled of the three names. If a product says "Supima®," there's a real certification and audit trail behind it.
Pima
Pima is the broader, unregulated name for American ELS cotton. It refers to the same species (Gossypium barbadense) but without the quality controls and traceability that Supima® enforces. "Pima cotton" can come from anywhere — the U.S., Peru, Israel, Australia — and quality can vary widely.
Think of it this way: all Supima® is Pima, but not all Pima is Supima®. The Supima® trademark is the quality filter.
How they compare
| Feature | Egyptian | Supima® | Pima |
|---|---|---|---|
| Species | G. barbadense | G. barbadense | G. barbadense |
| Grown in | Egypt | USA (CA, AZ, NM, TX) | Various countries |
| Quality control | Varies by grade | Certified & traceable | Unregulated |
| Staple length | Varies (Giza 45: ELS; others: LS) | 34mm+ (ELS only) | Varies widely |
| Price premium | High (especially Giza 45) | Moderate-high | Moderate |
| Reliability of label | Low — label is often misused | High — certified trademark | Low — no regulation |
The fraud problem
"Egyptian cotton" is one of the most misused labels in textiles. Studies have found that a significant percentage of products labeled "Egyptian cotton" in the U.S. market don't actually contain Egyptian cotton, or contain blends where Egyptian cotton is a minority component. Without a strong trademark enforcement body (like Supima® has), the label is easily abused.
This doesn't mean Egyptian cotton is bad — genuine Egyptian Giza cotton is among the finest in the world. It means you need to trust the brand selling it, not just the label.
What about Indian long-staple cotton?
India is the world's largest cotton producer and grows excellent long-staple varieties from Gujarat, Maharashtra, and the Deccan plateau. Premium Indian long-staple cotton, when carefully grown, picked, and ginned, rivals any cotton in the world. It doesn't carry the marketing cachet of "Egyptian" or "Supima," but it's what luxury hotel manufacturers — including us — have relied on for decades to supply the world's best hotels.
The name on the origin matters less than the actual fiber quality, the ginning care, and the spinning and weaving process. A well-sourced, well-processed Indian long-staple cotton sheet will outperform a poorly made "Egyptian cotton" sheet every time.
The Dove & Thread approach
We source long-staple cotton from trusted suppliers with established quality records. We don't use cotton origin as a marketing badge — we use fiber testing, yarn specifications (40's single-pick), and construction details (110 × 90 EPI, singed and calendered finish) to guarantee quality. Our products are judged by how they feel on night one and night 500, not by the geographic name on the label.
Don't buy sheets based on a cotton name. Buy them based on fiber length (long-staple or ELS), construction (yarn count, EPI/PPI, weave), finishing (singed, calendered), and the manufacturer's track record. Those are the things that determine how a sheet actually feels and lasts.
