Buyers Guide

Pillow Buying Guide: How to Choose the Right Pillow in 2026

Most people put more thought into choosing a mattress than a pillow, which is a mistake. Your pillow is responsible for supporting your head and neck — the most critical part of spinal alignment during sleep. A wrong pillow can cause neck pain, headaches, shoulder tension, and poor sleep quality regardless of how good your mattress is. The right pillow keeps your ears aligned with your shoulders and maintains the natural curve of your cervical spine.

After years of helping clients solve neck pain and sleep quality issues, I can tell you that pillow choice comes down to three factors: your sleeping position (which determines the loft and firmness you need), the fill material (which determines the feel and durability), and your personal comfort preferences. This guide walks you through each factor so you can choose a pillow that actually improves your sleep.

The Most Important Factor: Loft (Height)

Loft is the height of your pillow when it’s lying flat on the bed. It’s the single most important pillow characteristic because it determines whether your neck is properly aligned with your spine. Too high, and your neck bends upward. Too low, and your neck bends downward. Either misalignment causes strain, pain, and poor sleep.

Low Loft (2-3 inches)

Best for stomach sleepers. A thin pillow keeps the head close to the mattress surface, preventing the neck from rotating excessively upward. Some stomach sleepers sleep best with no pillow at all — if a low-loft pillow still feels too high, try sleeping without one.

Medium Loft (3-5 inches)

Best for back sleepers. A medium-height pillow cradles the head and fills the natural curve of the neck without pushing the head too far forward. The pillow should support the head and neck without lifting the head above the level of the shoulders.

High Loft (5-7 inches)

Best for side sleepers. A tall, firm pillow fills the space between the head and the mattress created by the width of the shoulders. Without adequate loft, a side sleeper’s head tilts downward toward the mattress, straining the neck. The wider your shoulders, the higher the loft you need.

A simple test: lie in your sleeping position with your pillow. Have someone look at you from behind (or take a photo). Your spine should form a straight line from your tailbone through your neck. If your head tilts up or down, your pillow loft is wrong.

Pillow Fill Types Explained

Memory Foam

Memory foam pillows conform to the shape of your head and neck, providing customized support. They come in two forms: solid (a single piece of contoured foam) and shredded (small pieces of memory foam in a pillow shell).

Down

Down pillows use the soft, fluffy undercoating of duck or goose feathers. They’re lightweight, compressible, and have a luxurious, cloud-like feel. Down pillows are highly moldable — you can bunch them up, flatten them, or shape them to your preference.

Down Alternative (Polyester Fill)

Synthetic fibers designed to mimic the feel of down at a lower price point. Hypoallergenic and easier to wash than natural down. Available in various firmness levels from soft and fluffy to firm and supportive.

Latex

Latex pillows are made from natural or synthetic rubber foam. They’re responsive, supportive, and naturally breathable. Like memory foam, they come in solid and shredded forms. Latex has a bouncier, more responsive feel than memory foam — it pushes back rather than slowly conforming.

Buckwheat

Buckwheat pillows are filled with buckwheat hulls — the hard outer shells of buckwheat seeds. They’re firm, supportive, highly adjustable (add or remove hulls), and naturally breathable. The hulls conform to your head and neck shape and stay in place, providing consistent support throughout the night.

Feather

Feather pillows use the outer feathers of ducks or geese (as opposed to the soft undercoating used in down pillows). They’re firmer and more supportive than down, with a slightly springy feel. Feather pillows are more affordable than down but less luxuriously soft.

Choosing by Sleeping Position

Side Sleepers

Side sleepers need the most pillow support because the gap between the head and mattress is largest in this position. The pillow must fill the space created by the shoulder width while keeping the spine straight.

Back Sleepers

Back sleepers need a pillow that supports the natural curve of the cervical spine without pushing the head too far forward. The pillow should cradle the head and fill the space behind the neck.

Stomach Sleepers

Stomach sleepers need the least pillow — or no pillow at all. Any significant loft forces the neck into an upward rotation that strains the cervical spine. The goal is to keep the head as close to the mattress surface as possible.

Combination Sleepers

If you switch positions during the night, you need a pillow that adapts. Adjustable-fill pillows (shredded memory foam, shredded latex, or buckwheat) let you customize the loft to a middle ground that works in multiple positions. A medium-loft, medium-firmness pillow is the safest choice for combination sleepers.

Special Considerations

Neck Pain

If you wake up with neck pain or stiffness, your pillow is the most likely culprit. The fix is usually a loft adjustment — too high or too low causes strain. Contoured memory foam pillows with a cervical support ridge can help by providing targeted neck support. Shredded fill pillows that let you adjust the loft precisely are also excellent for finding the exact height that eliminates your pain.

Allergies

Down and feather pillows can trigger allergies in sensitive individuals. Hypoallergenic options include down alternative (polyester), memory foam, latex, and buckwheat. Look for pillows with tightly woven covers that prevent dust mite penetration. Washing your pillow regularly (if washable) or using a pillow protector also helps manage allergens.

Hot Sleepers

Memory foam pillows trap the most heat. If you sleep hot, choose latex (naturally breathable), buckwheat (excellent airflow between hulls), or a cooling gel-infused pillow. Shredded fill pillows breathe better than solid foam because air circulates between the pieces. Pillow covers made from bamboo or Tencel also help with temperature regulation.

How Often Should You Replace Your Pillow?

Most pillows should be replaced every 1-3 years, depending on the fill type:

A simple test: fold your pillow in half. If it stays folded and doesn’t spring back, it’s lost its support and needs replacing. If you wake up with neck pain that wasn’t there when the pillow was new, it’s time for a replacement.

Pillow Care Tips

Frequently Asked Questions

How many pillows should I sleep with?

One pillow under your head is ideal for most people. Using two pillows stacked often creates too much loft, pushing the head too far forward and straining the neck. If one pillow isn’t enough, switch to a higher-loft pillow rather than stacking two. A second pillow between the knees (for side sleepers) or under the knees (for back sleepers) can improve spinal alignment, but that’s a body pillow, not a head pillow.

Are expensive pillows worth it?

Not always. A $30-$60 shredded memory foam or latex pillow can provide excellent support and comfort. Expensive down pillows ($100-$200+) offer a luxury feel but don’t necessarily provide better neck support. The most important factor is choosing the right loft and firmness for your sleeping position — a $30 pillow with the correct loft will serve you better than a $150 pillow with the wrong loft.

Should I use a contoured pillow?

Contoured (cervical) pillows have a raised edge that supports the neck and a lower center that cradles the head. They work well for back sleepers with neck pain because they provide targeted cervical support. However, they’re less comfortable for side sleepers (the contour doesn’t align well with the side-sleeping position) and they’re not adjustable. If you sleep primarily on your back and have neck issues, a contoured pillow is worth trying.

The Bottom Line

Choosing a pillow is simpler than it seems: match the loft to your sleeping position (high for side, medium for back, low for stomach), choose a fill material that matches your comfort and temperature preferences, and replace it when it loses support. An adjustable shredded memory foam or shredded latex pillow is the most versatile option because you can customize the loft precisely. Don’t underestimate the impact of your pillow on sleep quality — it’s a small investment ($30-$80) that can eliminate neck pain and dramatically improve how you feel in the morning. Your body will thank you for getting this right.

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