EXPERT SLEEP GUIDE · LAST UPDATED JULY 2026 · BY LINCOVE SLEEP SPECIALISTS
For neck pain, your back is the most forgiving position — if your pillow loft is right — with your unaffected side a close second and stomach sleeping the clear worst. But position alone fixed nothing in our 13,425-person study: back sleepers reported the most morning tension of any group, because a position only works when the pillow height underneath it matches.

EXPERT SLEEP GUIDE · LAST UPDATED JULY 2026 · BY LINCOVE SLEEP SPECIALISTS
For neck pain, your back is the most forgiving position — if your pillow loft is right — with your unaffected side a close second and stomach sleeping the clear worst. But position alone fixed nothing in our 13,425-person study: back sleepers reported the most morning tension of any group, because a position only works when the pillow height underneath it matches.

Back sleeping wins on mechanics — weight is even, neither side of the neck is compressed, and the head has no reason to rotate. It needs a medium pillow with roughly 3 to 5 inches of stable loft: too tall pushes the chin toward the chest, too flat lets the head tip back.
Your side comes second — with one condition: the pillow must fill the entire shoulder gap, usually 4 to 6 inches and more for broad shoulders, so the nose, chin, and breastbone stay in one straight line. If one side of the neck hurts, sleep on the other side.
Stomach is the position to retire — it holds the head rotated to one side for hours, every night. If you cannot quit it yet, limit the damage with a soft pillow under 3 inches — or no head pillow at all and a thin one under the pelvis.
No position is safe by itself — in our study, back sleepers reported the most morning tension of any group (57.3%), not the least. A position only protects your neck when the pillow loft matches it — which is why the pillow, not the position, is usually the thing to fix first.
Back sleeping wins on mechanics — weight is even, neither side of the neck is compressed, and the head has no reason to rotate. It needs a medium pillow with roughly 3 to 5 inches of stable loft: too tall pushes the chin toward the chest, too flat lets the head tip back.
Your side comes second — with one condition: the pillow must fill the entire shoulder gap, usually 4 to 6 inches and more for broad shoulders, so the nose, chin, and breastbone stay in one straight line. If one side of the neck hurts, sleep on the other side.
Stomach is the position to retire — it holds the head rotated to one side for hours, every night. If you cannot quit it yet, limit the damage with a soft pillow under 3 inches — or no head pillow at all and a thin one under the pelvis.
No position is safe by itself — in our study, back sleepers reported the most morning tension of any group (57.3%), not the least. A position only protects your neck when the pillow loft matches it — which is why the pillow, not the position, is usually the thing to fix first.
The ranking is mechanical — how well each position can hold the cervical spine neutral. The tension rate is what people in our study actually reported. The gap between the two columns is the pillow.
Position | Wake with tension | Why it ranks here | How to set it up |
|---|---|---|---|
1. Back (most forgiving) | 57.3% | Even weight, no rotation — but the least forgiving of the wrong loft, which is why its real-world tension rate is the worst | One medium pillow, 3–5 inches of stable loft; chin neither tilted up nor tucked down |
2. Side — the unaffected side | 50.1% | The spine rests straight once the shoulder gap is filled, and the painful side stays off the mattress | Medium-firm, 4–6 inches — taller for broad shoulders. Nose, chin, and breastbone in one straight line |
3. Combination | 45.8% | Movement spreads the load — but every switch changes the loft the neck needs, so a slow, rigid pillow gets it wrong half the night | One medium, responsive pillow around 4–5 inches that re-lofts as you turn — down adapts fastest |
4. Stomach (worst) | 39.0% | The lowest reported tension in our study — but it holds the head rotated to one side for hours, the exact sustained strain a sore neck cannot afford | Soft pillow under 3 inches, or a thin pillow under the pelvis while you retrain toward back or side |
The ranking is mechanical — how well each position can hold the cervical spine neutral. The tension rate is what people in our study actually reported. The gap between the two columns is the pillow.
Position | Wake with tension | Why it ranks here | How to set it up |
|---|---|---|---|
1. Back (most forgiving) | 57.3% | Even weight, no rotation — but the least forgiving of the wrong loft, which is why its real-world tension rate is the worst | One medium pillow, 3–5 inches of stable loft; chin neither tilted up nor tucked down |
2. Side — the unaffected side | 50.1% | The spine rests straight once the shoulder gap is filled, and the painful side stays off the mattress | Medium-firm, 4–6 inches — taller for broad shoulders. Nose, chin, and breastbone in one straight line |
3. Combination | 45.8% | Movement spreads the load — but every switch changes the loft the neck needs, so a slow, rigid pillow gets it wrong half the night | One medium, responsive pillow around 4–5 inches that re-lofts as you turn — down adapts fastest |
4. Stomach (worst) | 39.0% | The lowest reported tension in our study — but it holds the head rotated to one side for hours, the exact sustained strain a sore neck cannot afford | Soft pillow under 3 inches, or a thin pillow under the pelvis while you retrain toward back or side |
Every position has a pillow height that makes it work and a height that quietly undoes it. These numbers are compressed loft — the height under the actual weight of your head, not the height on the shelf.
The pillow has to bridge the full gap between ear and mattress. Broader shoulders widen that gap — 5 to 7 inches and a firm fill. If your head tips down toward the mattress, the loft is too low; if you feel a stretch on the underside of the neck, it is too high.
Enough to support the natural curve of the neck, never enough to push the chin toward the chest. This is the narrowest target of the four — which is exactly why back sleepers post the worst tension numbers when the pillow is wrong.
Anything taller tilts the chin upward and adds extension on top of the rotation the position already forces. A soft, low pillow the head can settle into — or none at all — keeps the strain as small as the position allows.
Lying on your side, the pillow should hold your nose, chin, and breastbone in a straight line. On your back, your chin should not tilt up or tuck down. If you feel a stretch on the underside of the neck, the pillow is too high.
Every position has a pillow height that makes it work and a height that quietly undoes it. These numbers are compressed loft — the height under the actual weight of your head, not the height on the shelf.
The pillow has to bridge the full gap between ear and mattress. Broader shoulders widen that gap — 5 to 7 inches and a firm fill. If your head tips down toward the mattress, the loft is too low; if you feel a stretch on the underside of the neck, it is too high.
Enough to support the natural curve of the neck, never enough to push the chin toward the chest. This is the narrowest target of the four — which is exactly why back sleepers post the worst tension numbers when the pillow is wrong.
Anything taller tilts the chin upward and adds extension on top of the rotation the position already forces. A soft, low pillow the head can settle into — or none at all — keeps the strain as small as the position allows.
Lying on your side, the pillow should hold your nose, chin, and breastbone in a straight line. On your back, your chin should not tilt up or tuck down. If you feel a stretch on the underside of the neck, the pillow is too high.
Nobody wills themselves into a new sleep position overnight — you lose control the moment you fall asleep. What works is making the target position easier and the old one harder.
A body pillow along your back stops the half-asleep roll onto your stomach or painful side. Stomach sleepers in transition do best with a pillow under the hip and a very low head pillow — it makes the old position feel wrong before it strains anything.
The neck needs time to adapt to a different support height, and morning stiffness usually improves before daytime comfort does. Judge the change after two weeks of consistent nights, not after the first strange-feeling one.
You will still move at night — combination sleeping is normal, not failure. Control the position you fall asleep in, and use a responsive pillow that re-lofts when you turn, so the switches you cannot control still land on the right height.
Nobody wills themselves into a new sleep position overnight — you lose control the moment you fall asleep. What works is making the target position easier and the old one harder.
A body pillow along your back stops the half-asleep roll onto your stomach or painful side. Stomach sleepers in transition do best with a pillow under the hip and a very low head pillow — it makes the old position feel wrong before it strains anything.
The neck needs time to adapt to a different support height, and morning stiffness usually improves before daytime comfort does. Judge the change after two weeks of consistent nights, not after the first strange-feeling one.
You will still move at night — combination sleeping is normal, not failure. Control the position you fall asleep in, and use a responsive pillow that re-lofts when you turn, so the switches you cannot control still land on the right height.
The ranking only holds if the pillow holds its loft until morning. Both come in soft, medium, and firm, backed by Lincove's 60-day trial with a free firmness exchange — so you can match the height to your position without guessing.

BEST FOR SIDE SLEEPERS
800 fill power Hutterite Canadian down in a 500 thread count cotton sateen shell with double-stitched edges. The highest loft we offer — in firm, it bridges the full 4-to-6-inch shoulder gap a side sleeper needs and holds that height all night instead of collapsing under the head.

BEST FOR BACK & COMBINATION SLEEPERS
625 fill power Canadian down with an antimicrobial cotton sateen shell. In medium it holds the 3-to-5-inch loft a back sleeper needs, and the down re-lofts the moment you turn — the responsiveness that keeps a combination sleeper on the right height through every switch.
The ranking only holds if the pillow holds its loft until morning. Both come in soft, medium, and firm, backed by Lincove's 60-day trial with a free firmness exchange — so you can match the height to your position without guessing.

BEST FOR SIDE SLEEPERS
800 fill power Hutterite Canadian down in a 500 thread count cotton sateen shell with double-stitched edges. The highest loft we offer — in firm, it bridges the full 4-to-6-inch shoulder gap a side sleeper needs and holds that height all night instead of collapsing under the head.

BEST FOR BACK & COMBINATION SLEEPERS
625 fill power Canadian down with an antimicrobial cotton sateen shell. In medium it holds the 3-to-5-inch loft a back sleeper needs, and the down re-lofts the moment you turn — the responsiveness that keeps a combination sleeper on the right height through every switch.
The most common questions people ask about sleeping positions and neck pain.
The most common questions people ask about sleeping positions and neck pain.
OUR METHODOLOGY
This guide draws on Lincove's twenty-plus years designing Canadian Hutterite down pillows, plus sleep-position and tension data from 13,425 completed sleep-profile quizzes on quiz.lincove.com. The position-tension figures are correlations from self-selected quiz takers, not a controlled trial — we publish them because they challenge the assumption that position alone protects the neck. Recommendations weigh loft, firmness, fill power, and sleeper anatomy rather than marketing claims. Every product mentioned is sold by Lincove and backed by our 60-Day Pillow Guarantee and 5-Year Limited Warranty.
Downmark Certified
Hutterite Canadian down
60-Day Sleep Trial
Free firmness exchange
13,425-Person Study
Sleep-profile quiz data, quiz.lincove.com
OUR METHODOLOGY
This guide draws on Lincove's twenty-plus years designing Canadian Hutterite down pillows, plus sleep-position and tension data from 13,425 completed sleep-profile quizzes on quiz.lincove.com. The position-tension figures are correlations from self-selected quiz takers, not a controlled trial — we publish them because they challenge the assumption that position alone protects the neck. Recommendations weigh loft, firmness, fill power, and sleeper anatomy rather than marketing claims. Every product mentioned is sold by Lincove and backed by our 60-Day Pillow Guarantee and 5-Year Limited Warranty.
Downmark Certified
Hutterite Canadian down
60-Day Sleep Trial
Free firmness exchange
13,425-Person Study
Sleep-profile quiz data, quiz.lincove.com
Take the 60-second pillow quiz to match loft and firmness to your sleep position and shoulder width — the pairing our data says decides whether any position actually protects your neck. Then try it for sixty nights with a free firmness exchange.
Free shipping & returns in the USA and Canada · 5-Year Limited Warranty
This guide is for general informational purposes and is not medical advice. Neck pain with radiating pain, numbness, or weakness should be evaluated by a healthcare professional.
Take the 60-second pillow quiz to match loft and firmness to your sleep position and shoulder width — the pairing our data says decides whether any position actually protects your neck. Then try it for sixty nights with a free firmness exchange.
Free shipping & returns in the USA and Canada · 5-Year Limited Warranty
This guide is for general informational purposes and is not medical advice. Neck pain with radiating pain, numbness, or weakness should be evaluated by a healthcare professional.