What's The Ideal Pillow Height For Side Sleepers? (By Shoulder Width)
Why Pillow Height Matters More for Side Sleepers
Side sleeping is the most common position, but it is also the most demanding on your pillow. When you lie on your side, the distance between your ear and the mattress equals the width of your shoulder. Your pillow must fill that gap exactly to keep your cervical spine in neutral alignment. If the gap is not filled, your spine bends sideways (lateral flexion) for 7–8 hours, straining muscles, compressing facet joints, and pinching nerves. This leads to morning neck pain, shoulder pain, arm numbness, and headaches.
How to Measure Your Ideal Pillow Height (Step by Step)
- Lie on your side on a firm surface (like the floor or a firm mattress).
- Have someone measure from the base of your neck (the curve just above your collarbone) to the outer edge of your shoulder.
- That distance (in inches) is your ideal pillow loft. For most people, this is 4–6 inches.
- Smaller frames (women, petite individuals): 3–4 inches. Larger frames (men, broad shoulders): 5–7 inches.
- Alternative method: Lie on your side without a pillow. Have someone look at your neck from behind. Measure the vertical distance from the mattress to the side of your head — that is your needed loft.
Pillow Height Guidelines by Body Type
- Shoulder width less than 4 inches (narrow): Pillow loft 3–4 inches. Look for "low loft" side sleeper pillows.
- Shoulder width 4–5 inches (average): Pillow loft 4–5 inches. Medium loft pillows work well.
- Shoulder width 5–6 inches (broad): Pillow loft 5–6 inches. High loft or "extra tall" side sleeper pillows.
- Shoulder width >6 inches (very broad): Pillow loft 6–7 inches. You may need a custom adjustable pillow.
What Happens If Your Pillow Is the Wrong Height?
Too low (under 4 inches): Your head drops toward the mattress, bending your neck sideways. This compresses the shoulder, pinches the rotator cuff, and can cause ulnar nerve numbness in the arm. You may wake up with a "dead arm" or burning pain between your shoulder blades.
Too high (over 6 inches): Your head is pushed upward, bending your neck in the opposite direction. This strains the upper trapezius and can cause cervicogenic headaches, jaw clenching, and brachial plexus compression (full arm numbness).
Types of Pillows That Work Best for Side Sleepers
- Contour (cervical) pillows: Have a higher edge for neck support and a lower depression for the head. Excellent for maintaining neutral alignment.
- Shredded memory foam (adjustable): You can remove or add fill to dial in your exact loft. Ideal if you're between standard sizes.
- Latex pillows: Naturally bouncy and supportive, but confirm the loft matches your shoulder width.
- Gel‑infused memory foam: Same contour benefits with better cooling.
Avoid flat, non‑adjustable polyester pillows — they go flat within weeks and cannot provide the consistent height side sleepers need.
Common Mistakes Side Sleepers Make With Pillow Height
- Using the same pillow for years: Foam degrades and loft decreases. Pillows lose 1–2 inches of height over 2 years.
- Folding a flat pillow in half: Creates an unstable, uneven surface that moves during sleep.
- Sleeping with your arm under the pillow: This artificially raises your head and crushes nerves — fix the pillow height instead.
- Buying a "one size fits all" pillow: Side sleepers have vastly different shoulder widths. Always measure.
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