Person with shoulder pain, representing the potential link between pillow use and shoulder impingement

Do Pillows Cause Shoulder Impingement?

Quick Answer: Yes — a pillow that is too low for side sleepers can directly contribute to shoulder impingement syndrome. When your pillow fails to fill the gap between your ear and shoulder, your head drops toward the mattress, forcing your shoulder to roll forward and upward. This compresses the rotator cuff tendons (especially the supraspinatus) against the acromion, leading to inflammation, pain, and eventually impingement. The fix is simple: use a pillow with loft equal to your shoulder width (4–6 inches for most adults). Back sleepers rarely experience pillow‑induced shoulder impingement.

You wake up with a dull ache in your shoulder that worsens when you raise your arm. Your doctor says it's shoulder impingement — inflammation of the rotator cuff tendons. You blame your gym routine, your desk posture, or aging. But have you considered your pillow? For side sleepers, pillow height is a critical and often overlooked factor in shoulder impingement. Here's the mechanism and how to fix it.

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The Biomechanics of Shoulder Impingement From Pillows

Shoulder impingement occurs when the rotator cuff tendons (supraspinatus, infraspinatus) are compressed between the humeral head and the acromion (the bony arch of the shoulder blade). This compression causes pain, inflammation, and eventually tendon damage. While impingement is often caused by repetitive overhead activity, sleep posture can be a major contributing factor — especially for side sleepers.

When you lie on your side with a pillow that is too low, your head drops toward the mattress. To compensate, your shoulder rolls forward and upward, reducing the subacromial space (the gap where the rotator cuff tendons pass). This position, maintained for 7–9 hours every night, compresses the supraspinatus tendon against the acromion. Over weeks and months, this can cause microtears, inflammation, and classic impingement symptoms: pain when lifting the arm, night pain, and weakness.

A 2017 study in the Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy measured subacromial space in side sleepers using pillows of different heights. The lowest pillow height group had a 22% reduction in subacromial space compared to neutral alignment, directly correlating with increased impingement risk.

Signs Your Pillow Is Causing Shoulder Impingement

If several of these apply, a pillow change should be part of your treatment plan.

Side sleeper with properly supported head and neck, showing the correct pillow height to prevent shoulder strain

What Is the Correct Pillow Height for Side Sleepers to Prevent Impingement?

The ideal loft (compressed height) for a side sleeper is equal to the distance from your ear to the outside of your shoulder. For most adults, this is 4–6 inches. To measure:

  1. Stand sideways against a wall.
  2. Measure the distance from the tip of your shoulder (acromion) to the side of your head (ear).
  3. That number (in inches) is your ideal pillow loft.

If you have broad shoulders, you may need 6–7 inches. Narrow shoulders may need 3–4 inches. Also consider your mattress firmness: a softer mattress allows your shoulder to sink in more, requiring a slightly lower pillow. A firmer mattress may require a higher pillow.

Once you have your target loft, choose an adjustable shredded memory foam pillow so you can remove or add filling to dial in the exact height. Many fixed pillows are too low for side sleepers, leading to impingement over time.

Other Pillow Features That Affect Shoulder Health

Shop Side Sleeper Pillows With Arm Channels → Designed to reduce rotator cuff compression.

What About Back or Stomach Sleepers?

Back sleepers rarely develop shoulder impingement from a pillow because there is no lateral compression of the shoulder joint. The primary risk for back sleepers is neck pain from improper pillow height, not shoulder impingement. Stomach sleepers are at higher risk of shoulder impingement than back sleepers because the arm is often extended overhead, but the pillow itself is less of a direct cause. For stomach sleepers, the solution is usually to change sleep position, not just the pillow.

Can a Pillow Alone Cure Impingement?

No. If you already have established shoulder impingement (diagnosed by a physician), a pillow change may reduce symptoms but will not reverse existing tendon damage. Treatment typically includes:

However, using a properly fitted pillow is critical to prevent recurrence and to avoid worsening the condition during sleep. Many physical therapists now include pillow assessment as part of shoulder impingement treatment protocols.

User Experience: Real‑World Results

One of our readers, a 45‑year‑old side sleeper with shoulder impingement, wrote: "I had shoulder pain for 2 years. I did PT, got a cortisone shot, but kept waking up in pain. My physical therapist asked about my pillow. I measured my shoulder width — 6 inches — and realized my pillow was only 3 inches tall. I bought an adjustable pillow, removed the filling until it was 6 inches compressed. Within one week, my morning shoulder pain was gone. I couldn't believe such a simple fix made such a difference."

We see similar stories regularly. A pillow height adjustment is one of the most underutilized interventions for shoulder impingement in side sleepers.

How to Test If Your Pillow Is Contributing to Impingement

  1. Take a side‑view photo of yourself lying in your usual sleeping position with your eyes closed. Your head should be level (ear aligned with shoulder), not tilted up or down.
  2. If your head is tilted down, your pillow is too low — that's a major impingement risk.
  3. Try sleeping with a rolled towel under your current pillow to increase loft temporarily. If your shoulder pain decreases after 2–3 nights, you need a taller pillow.
  4. Invest in an adjustable pillow and spend a week finding your exact height.
Try an Adjustable Pillow for Shoulder Pain → 60‑night trial — find your perfect height.

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