Proteoglycans are hierarchically organized structures that play an important role in the hydration and the compression resistance of cartilage matrix. In this study, the static and dynamic properties relevant to the biomechanical function of cartilage are determined at different levels of the hierarchical structure, using complementary osmotic pressure, neutron scattering (SANS) and light scattering (DLS) measurements. In cartilage proteoglycans (PGs), two levels of bottlebrush structures can be distinguished: the aggrecan monomer, which consists of a core protein to which are tethered charged glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains, and complexes formed of the aggrecan monomers attached around a linear hyaluronic acid backbone. The principal component of GAG, chondroitin sulfate (CS), is used as a baseline in this comparison. The osmotic modulus, measured as a function of the proteoglycan concentration, follows the order CS < aggrecan < aggrecan-HA complex. This order underlines the benefit of the increasing complexity at each level of the molecular architecture. The hierarchical bottlebrush configuration, which prevents interpenetration among the bristles of the aggrecan monomers, enhances both the mechanical properties and the osmotic resistance. The osmotic pressure of the collagen solution is notably smaller than in the proteoglycan systems. This is consistent with its known primary role to provide tensile strength to the cartilage and to confine the aggrecan-HA complexes, as opposed to load bearing. The collective diffusion coefficient D governs the rate of recovery of biological tissue after compressive load. In CS solutions the diffusion process is fast, D ≈ 3 × 10-6 cm2 s-1 at concentrations comparable with that of the GAG chains inside the aggrecan molecule. In CS solutions D is a weakly decreasing function of calcium ion concentration, while in aggrecan and its complexes with HA, the relaxation rate is insensitive to the presence of calcium.