Your data. Your choice.

If you select «Essential cookies only», we’ll use cookies and similar technologies to collect information about your device and how you use our website. We need this information to allow you to log in securely and use basic functions such as the shopping cart.

By accepting all cookies, you’re allowing us to use this data to show you personalised offers, improve our website, and display targeted adverts on our website and on other websites or apps. Some data may also be shared with third parties and advertising partners as part of this process.

Product test

My Ohropax odyssey: is a pillow with a hole the solution?

Darina Schweizer
29/1/2025
Translation: Elicia Payne

The relationship between earplugs and me is complicated – it’s a love, hate relationship. This is the first article in my new series on finding the most comfortable hearing protection for the night.

If I were a piece of technology, I’d be an early warning system. Whether it’s a new clock ticking in the display case in the next room or pipe renovation three streets away: I wake up at every sound. In the Stone Age, I’d have made an excellent guard. These days, it usually just makes me irritable or tired.

And it’s because I flinch at the tiniest of things that I wear earplugs at night. They’re not conventional foam ones – they don’t hold or dampen sounds enough – but custom-made ones from a hearing care professional. The problem is, they press on my ear and itch like hell. Sometimes my ears are inflamed from them.

That’s why I was over the moon when I unpacked the Sanapur pillow and found out that the height can be adjusted – thanks to three foam inserts. One is thicker and firmer, two are thinner and softer – these return to their original shape particularly quickly after lying on them. On the first night, I leave all the inserts in the washable pillowcase.

Finally! One thick insert provides the perfect height for me and my slightly sideways sleeping position with the pillow under my arm. It’s soft, but still supportive. The indentation at the height of the hole means the pillow doesn’t get in the way of my shoulder. At least, it works when I turn the pillow slightly to the right towards the raised shoulder. I can feel the effect immediately – the earplug no longer presses in the ear I’m sleeping on.

So I’ve now partially eliminated the pressure sensation caused by the earplugs. At least the pillow offers me noticeable relief when falling asleep. However, I still find that my ear itches and inflames. I’m already daydreaming about Bluetooth headbands. Or maybe I’m just allergic and hypoallergenic earplugs would help? Follow me if you don’t want to miss out on other ideas I come up with.

Do you have any tips for me? Which hearing protection do you sleep best with and what do you rest your head on? Let us know in the comments!

In a nutshell

Great for side sleepers, a must for those who wear ear protection

The Sanapur Med Swiss+ is a multifunctional and stable pillow that can be adjusted to different heights. It’s particularly suitable for side and back sleepers, but people who sleep on their stomach can also find a comfortable position with a small support under the arm. The hole in the pillow provides noticeable relief for earplug and piercing wearers, but could be slightly larger to keep the ear in place even during night-time movements. The removable cover requires a little skill and can be washed at up to 60 degrees Celcius.

Pro

  • High quality
  • Height adjustment
  • Comfortable firmness
  • Washable
  • Good relief

Contra

  • Slightly small hole for Ohropax earplug users
  • Changing the cover a little awkward

81 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

I love anything with four legs or roots - especially my shelter cats Jasper and Joy and my collection of succulents. My favourite things to do are stalking around with police dogs and cat coiffeurs on reportages or letting sensitive stories flourish in garden brockis and Japanese gardens. 


Product test

Our experts test products and their applications. Independently and neutrally.

Show all

These articles might also interest you

  • Product test

    From baby blanket to design favourite: muslin reinvented

    by Pia Seidel

  • Product test

    This wireless skipping rope is a strange solution to an inexistent problem

    by Michael Restin

  • Product test

    Bye-bye bed, Konnichiwa tatami!

    by Carolin Teufelberger