Pillow Height Calculator: Find Your Perfect Loft By Body Type
1. Why Pillow Height Must Match Your Body
Pillow height is not one‑size‑fits‑all. A pillow that works for a 6'2" man with broad shoulders will cause severe neck pain for a petite 5'2" woman. Height must be proportional to your shoulder width (side sleepers) or torso length (back sleepers). A difference of just 0.5 inches can change cervical alignment from neutral to problematic. The calculator below accounts for these factors.
2. The Shoulder Width Rule (Side Sleepers)
For side sleepers, the pillow must fill the exact distance from the mattress to your ear. This distance equals your shoulder width. To measure: have a friend measure from the bony tip of your shoulder (acromion) to the base of your neck (just above the collarbone). That measurement (in inches) is your ideal loft. If you sleep on a soft mattress where your shoulder sinks, subtract 0.5‑1 inch.
Quick shoulder width estimator:
Petite (women's small): 4‑4.5″
Average (men's medium / women's large): 4.5‑5.5″
Broad (men's large): 5.5‑6″
Extra broad (men's XL): 6‑6.5″
3. Back Sleepers: Loft by Height and Mattress Firmness
Back sleepers need a lower loft (2‑4 inches). The exact number depends on your height and the firmness of your mattress:
- Under 5'4" or firm mattress: 2‑2.5 inches
- 5'4"‑5'10" or medium mattress: 2.5‑3.5 inches
- Over 5'10" or soft mattress: 3.5‑4 inches
A cervical contour pillow (with a raised roll) provides better support than a flat pillow for back sleepers.
4. Stomach Sleepers: The Exception
Stomach sleeping is discouraged, but if you cannot switch, use the thinnest possible pillow (under 2 inches) or no pillow. A standard 4‑inch pillow forces your neck into extreme rotation. Consider a down or shredded foam pillow that can be compressed flat. Better yet, use our 21‑day sleep posture correction plan to transition to side sleeping.
5. Combination Sleepers: The Adjustable Solution
If you change positions during the night, a fixed‑loft pillow will be wrong for some positions. The solution is an adjustable shredded foam pillow that lets you add or remove fill. Start with a medium loft (4‑5 inches) and adjust up or down based on which position you wake up in most often.
Quick Assessment: Find Your Ideal Loft
Answer 4 quick questions — we'll calculate your recommended pillow height in inches and show you pillows that match.
6. How to Measure Your Current Pillow's Loft
Before buying a new pillow, measure your current one to see if it is the problem. Lay the pillow flat on a hard surface. Place a rigid ruler or a flat board across the top. Measure the vertical distance from the ruler to the surface at the pillow's centre. If the loft is more than 0.5 inches away from your calculated ideal, the pillow is likely contributing to your pain.
7. The "Nose‑to‑Breastbone" Verification Test
Once you have a pillow that matches your calculated loft, perform this final check: Lie on your side (or back) with the pillow. Have someone stand behind you. Your nose should align vertically with the centre of your breastbone. If it points down, the pillow is too low. If it points up, too high. This test overrides any calculation — trust your body.
Get Your Free Loft Calculator Kit
Enter your email to receive a PDF with the body measurement guide, printable loft ruler, and our top 5 pillows by loft range.
🔒 We respect your privacy. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
More Pillow Height Resources
How To Measure Correct Pillow Loft
Step‑by‑step guide.
Read More →Ideal Pillow Height For Side Sleepers
Detailed chart by body type.
Read More →Signs Your Pillow Is Too High
Symptoms and fixes.
Read More →How To Know If Your Pillow Is Too High
Self‑assessment.
Read More →What Is Pillow Loft?
Why it matters for spine health.
Read More →Best Adjustable Ergonomic Pillow
Pillows you can customise to your exact loft.
Read More →