Which underquilt do you need?
Tell us tonight's low, how exposed your spot is and how you sleep. We'll match you to the lightest Momo Jord underquilt that keeps your back warm — using honest Comfort ratings, not inflated system numbers.
No credit-stacking. Some brands quote a colder number only if you also buy a matching topquilt — crediting the topquilt's warmth to the underquilt. We don't. Our Comfort figure is the under-side rating; pair it with top insulation of at least the same rating and your system reaches that number.
Four quilts, one honest scale
Every Momo Jord underquilt is 850 fill-power RDS-certified down in a full-length H-baffle shell. We publish the Comfort rating as the headline — the temperature a typical sleeper stays warm at — with the Limit as a secondary spec for hardy sleepers with good top insulation.
| Model | Comfort | Limit | Best for | Down fill |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UQ300Your pickSummer | +5 °C | +2 °C | Summer & warm nights | 300 g |
| UQ400Your pickLightweight Warmth | 0 °C | −3 °C | Cool shoulder season | 400 g |
| UQ500Your pickSpring to Fall | −2 °C | −6 °C | 3-season (−5 °C with a topquilt) | 500 g |
| UQ800Your pickAll-Year Warmth | −10 °C | −15 °C | Deep cold, winter hangs | 800 g |
Why our quilts punch above their number
Two underquilts can share a fill weight and still sleep worlds apart — coverage is where the cold sneaks in. A quilt that's too short leaves your legs and shoulders hanging in the air; one that's too narrow lets draughts curl up the sides.
Every Momo Jord underquilt is full-length: 208 × 142 cm — 2.95 m² of down. That's longer and wider than many hammock underquilts on the market, which run shorter or narrower to save grams. The result is simpler and honest: more consistent contact with the hammock, fewer cold spots, and no scramble at 3 a.m. to chase a draught up your back.
Estimates, not lab certificates
These are field-informed estimates, not lab EN/ISO-tested ratings — and no underquilt is, because the EN 13537 standard assumes a sleeper on a ground pad, not hanging in a hammock. Anyone quoting an "EN-rated" underquilt is stretching the truth.
Real-world warmth shifts several degrees with wind, hammock fit, your metabolism and — above all — your top insulation. We publish Comfort figures, never inflated "with-topquilt system" numbers designed to look colder-capable than they are.
So treat the recommendation as a smart starting point: choose about 5 °C of headroom, be honest about your coldest night, and remember an underquilt only solves half the system — you always need warmth on top too.
