Why Side Sleeping Improves Snoring & Sleep Apnea | Rematee
Why Side Sleeping Can Improve Snoring & Positional Sleep Apnea
For many people, snoring and mild to moderate sleep apnea are significantly worse when sleeping on the back — a pattern known as positional snoring or positional sleep apnea. Understanding how body position affects your airway is the first step toward finding a more comfortable, effective solution.
How Sleeping Position Affects Your Airway
When lying on your back, gravity pulls the tongue and soft tissues toward the airway. This narrowing increases vibration and collapse, leading to snoring or apnea.
- Back sleeping: airway narrows and collapses more easily.
- Side sleeping: airway remains more open and stable.
- Result: less snoring and fewer breathing interruptions.
Sleep studies often show a much higher apnea–hypopnea index (AHI) on the back than on the side. When the difference is large, clinicians consider the condition to be positional sleep apnea.
If your AHI is significantly lower on your side, your sleep physician may recommend side sleeping as a first-line or combination therapy.
Who Benefits Most from Side Sleeping?
Side sleeping is especially helpful when:
- Your sleep study shows much higher AHI on your back.
- Your snoring mainly occurs when rolling onto your back.
- You feel better after nights spent mostly on your side.
- You prefer a non-invasive approach to improving nighttime breathing.
Why Most People Don’t Stay on Their Side Naturally
Even if you intend to side sleep, your body may drift onto your back during the night. Without support, your sleep position is often determined by habit or comfort — not airway health.
- You wake up on your back despite starting on your side.
- Side sleeping becomes uncomfortable without proper support.
- DIY fixes (tennis balls, backpacks) are too uncomfortable to maintain.
This is where positional therapy tools come in — designed to gently prevent back sleeping while making side sleeping feel natural and comfortable.
Ready to Explore Your Options?
See how DIY tricks, CPAP, oral appliances, and purpose-built positional therapy tools compare.