I didn’t realise how much I was twisting until I used something that actually stayed in place.
Verified CustomerTake the short quiz to see if your side-sleeping position is quietly putting pressure on your hips, knees, back, neck, or shoulders every night.
Women’s hips, knees, and sleeping angles are not the same as men’s. When the top leg drops forward, the pelvis can rotate with it. When the knees press together, the hips and lower back can carry that pressure all night.
15 quick questions. Tap the answer that feels closest, then see your recommended sleep setup.
Most women do. But if the same tightness keeps showing up every morning, the problem may not be what you sleep on. It may be how your body is positioned while you sleep.
Not every morning has to be terrible. But if the same hip, knee, lower back, neck, or shoulder area keeps showing up, your body may be repeating the same strained position overnight.
Side sleeping can feel comfortable, but only when the hips, knees, pelvis, spine, neck, and shoulders stack properly.
Most women think this is normal. But when the knees collapse together, the hips and pelvis often follow.
This is the movement most women never notice. Your top leg drops, your pelvis rotates, and your lower back can hold that twist for hours.
One-sided discomfort is often a clue. It can mean one side of your body has been carrying more load all night.
If your mattress is not the issue, your position may be. A rotated pelvis can leave the lower back feeling compressed by morning.
A lot of women blame stress. But if you wake up needing to move your hips, knees, or legs, your body may be trying to escape pressure.
That is not your fault. A normal pillow was never shaped to support the female hip-to-knee angle.
You can stretch during the day, then reload the same twisted position again while you sleep.
If your lower body twists one way, your upper body may compensate the other way. This is where full side-sleep support starts to matter.
That can be a sign your neck and shoulder are trying to fill a support gap while side sleeping.
Most sleep products are built like one generic body exists. But women’s frames are different, and side-sleeping support should be built around that.
Only choose yes if another side sleeper in your home would genuinely benefit from their own setup. Otherwise, your result will stay focused on your personal sleep support.
Your result is next. It will show whether your answers point to lower-body support, full side-sleep support, or a couples setup.
Based on your answers, your hips, knees, lower back, neck, and shoulders may not be stacking evenly while you sleep.
That same pressure pattern can repeat for 6–8 hours a night. Night after night. Over time, your body can start waking up tight, compressed, or uncomfortable before the day even starts.
Your result below is based on your answers. You can continue straight to the product page now, or scroll below if you want more detail before deciding.
Your answers do not strongly point to the Q-Angle Pillow right now. You can still read how it works, but there is no urgent recommendation based on this quiz.
Your answers point mostly to lower-body side-sleep alignment strain: hips, knees, pelvis, and lower back.
Your answers suggest your lower body needs support, and your neck or shoulders may be compensating too.
Because you said your partner may be interested too, your best-fit option is the two-person setup.
Continue to the product page now, or scroll below if you want to see more about why this setup was recommended.
When the top leg drops forward, the pelvis can rotate with it. Better knee support helps the lower body rest in a more natural position.
Designed to support the hip-to-knee angle women actually sleep with, so your knees stay comfortably separated and your pelvis can rest in a more natural position.
The Q-Angle Knee Pillow supports the lower body: hips, knees, pelvis, and lower back. The Cervical-Curve Neck Pillow supports the upper body: neck, shoulders, and natural cervical curve.
I didn’t realise how much I was twisting until I used something that actually stayed in place.
Verified CustomerI thought it was from sitting all day. Turns out my sleeping position was making it worse.
Verified CustomerThe knee pillow helped my lower body, then I added the neck pillow for the full setup.
Verified CustomerYour recommendation is based on how you answered the quiz. You can still adjust the bundle on the product page.
Best for one side sleeper
Best if your partner wants support too
It may need a sleep setup designed around the way women actually side sleep.