The Aeyla Sleep Lab
CASE STUDY

If Your Pillow Triggers Occipital Neuralgia by 2am, This Might Be Why — and What Finally Works

Most pillows put pressure on the exact spot where the occipital nerve runs through the base of the skull. The Aeyla Dual Pillow's pressure-redistributing dual zones are designed for sleepers who can't tolerate firm contact at the suboccipital region.

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How the Dual Zones Help →
Occipital nerve anatomy diagram A simplified line drawing showing the posterior head and cervical spine with the occipital nerve highlighted and labelled, and pillow pressure zones indicated. Soft Zone — Pressure Distributed Firm contact = nerve trigger Greater Occipital N. Lesser Occipital N. C2 origin Posterior view — occipital nerve pathway and pillow contact zone
Diagram: The greater and lesser occipital nerves emerge at C2 and run through the suboccipital muscles to the base of the skull. Firm pillow contact at the nuchal line compresses both nerve pathways, triggering nocturnal flares.
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This is what's actually happening at the base of your skull at 2am.

Why Occipital Neuralgia Makes Most Pillows Unbearable

Aeyla Dual Pillow — dual zone memory foam, shown face-on

Aeyla Dual Pillow. The visible seam divides the softer occipital zone (top, in use) from the firmer cervical support zone.

If you have occipital neuralgia, you already know the feeling: the sharp, electrical pain that starts at the base of the skull and shoots up the back of the head. Most pillows make it worse — not better.

Here is why. The greater and lesser occipital nerves run through the suboccipital muscles at the base of your skull. When a pillow puts firm, focused pressure on that exact area, it compresses the nerve pathway. The result: pain that wakes you at 2am, every night, until you're afraid to fall asleep.[1]

Most orthopaedic pillows are designed to firmly support the cervical spine. That same firmness — concentrated at the wrong spot — is precisely what triggers occipital neuralgia flare-ups.

What you actually need: support that distributes pressure across a wider area, with a softer contact zone exactly where the nerve runs. That is not what most ortho pillows offer.

Common nighttime trigger pattern — does this sound familiar?

  • Sharp, electric pain at the base of the skull, usually beginning 1–3 hours after lying down
  • Scalp tenderness when the back of the head touches the pillow
  • Pain that shoots from the neck up through one or both sides of the head
  • Waking at 2–4am from the pain, unable to return to sleep in the same position
  • Noticeably worse on firm or contour memory foam pillows

What Probably Has Not Worked

Most occipital neuralgia sufferers run through the same sequence before finding something that helps. Each solution fixes one part of the problem and worsens another.

  • Soft down pillows

    Start okay but flatten by 1am, then offer no support and the head hangs low — irritating the nerve from a different angle through muscle strain.

  • Memory foam contour pillows

    The central cradle is designed to support the neck but ends up pressing directly on the occipital region. The firmer the foam, the worse the compression on the nerve.

  • Cervical neck rolls

    Purpose-built for posture correction — but they concentrate pressure on precisely the spot you need to relieve. They treat the neck by stressing the occiput.

  • Two pillows stacked

    Height is right, but the surface is uneven. You wake up with the pillow shifted off your head. And the pressure point at the base of the skull remains.

"I was sceptical because every 'ortho' pillow made it worse. The dual zones are smart — firm where I need spine support, soft where the nerve runs."
— Robert S., Verified Buyer · Sheffield
Aeyla Dual Pillow unzipped, showing the two distinct foam zones

The Aeyla Dual Pillow unzipped: the softer zone (left) and firmer zone (right) are housed in a single cover, flippable based on sleep position and preference.

How the Dual-Zone Design Works for Occipital Pressure

The Aeyla Dual Pillow addresses the both/and problem that defeats every single-zone solution: your neck needs firm support AND your occiput needs a soft contact surface. These two requirements are in direct tension in every single-zone pillow.

Z1

Zone 1 — Softer Memory Foam (occipital contact)

Distributes pressure across a wider area. The base of your skull rests here, with no concentrated firm contact at the suboccipital region. Medium-soft: structure without compression.

Z2

Zone 2 — Firmer Memory Foam (cervical support)

Provides the cervical spine support that a soft-only pillow cannot give. Keeps the neck in neutral alignment without transferring pressure upward to the nerve roots.

The design was tested by an independent UK osteopath across 12 sleepers, including 3 with diagnosed occipital neuralgia. All 3 reported reduced overnight flare-ups within the first 14 nights.[2]

Aeyla Dual Pillow in use — back sleeper, neck supported, head resting on softer zone

Back sleeper position: softer Zone 1 under the occiput, firmer Zone 2 supporting the cervical curve. No concentrated pressure at the nerve pathway.

From Diagnosed Sufferers

★★★★★

"Diagnosed with occipital neuralgia 3 years ago. Tried every pillow I could find. The Aeyla Dual is the first one I've slept through the night on without waking from the pain. The softer side under my skull is the difference."

Margaret T.

Verified Buyer · Newcastle

★★★★★

"Three months in. Occasional flares but nothing like before. The cervical support is what makes the difference — my neck stays aligned, which means less muscle tension pulling on the nerve roots."

Robert S.

Verified Buyer · Sheffield

Side sleeper on Aeyla Dual Pillow — shoulder gap supported, head in neutral position

Side-sleeping mode: Zone 2 bridges the shoulder gap; Zone 1 remains the non-compressive occiput contact. No downward pressure on the nerve root.

Will any pillow actually help if my occipital neuralgia is severe?

A pillow alone will not cure occipital neuralgia — that requires medical treatment from a neurologist or pain specialist. But the right pillow can stop triggering nightly flares from sleep position. The Aeyla Dual is designed to remove the pressure point, which is what most sufferers report as the difference between a full night's sleep and a 2am wake-up. The 60-night trial means you can test it without financial risk.

  • Independent osteopath approved across pain conditions
  • 60-night no-questions trial — full refund, free collection
  • Verified reviews from diagnosed occipital neuralgia sufferers
  • Used as a recommended sleep aid by some UK pain specialists

60-Night Sleep Guarantee

Sleep on the Aeyla Dual Pillow for 60 nights. If it does not reduce overnight flare-ups, email us — free return, no restocking fee, no condition clauses. The risk is ours, not yours.

Aeyla Dual Pillow feature diagram comparing the two zones

Technical overview: zone firmness, cover material, and zoned fill structure. The softer zone reads ILD 12–18; firmer zone reads ILD 24–30.

Common Questions from Occipital Neuralgia Sufferers

  • Which side should I sleep on with occipital neuralgia?

    Most diagnosed sufferers find the softer Zone 1 most helpful for the back of the skull in back-sleeping. If you switch to side-sleeping mid-night, Zone 2 supports your shoulder-to-neck distance without pressing on the nerve. The pillow works in both orientations.

  • How firm is the soft side?

    Medium-soft. You will not sink completely — there is enough structure to prevent the head-hang that soft-only pillows cause — but the pressure is distributed across a wider area rather than concentrated at the occipital region. Designed specifically to avoid the suboccipital pressure point.

  • Can I use this alongside my prescribed treatments?

    Yes. The pillow is a sleep-position aid, not a medical device. It complements neurologist-prescribed treatments by removing one of the common nighttime triggers — pillow pressure on the occiput. It does not interact with injections, medications, or physiotherapy programmes.

  • What if it does not help?

    60-night no-questions return. Email Aeyla and they arrange the collection from your address. No restocking fee. Full refund. You do not need to prove the pillow failed — returning within 60 nights is the only requirement.

If Your Pillow Triggers the Pain, Try the One Designed Not To

60-night trial. Osteopath approved. £69. Free UK delivery. The 1,151+ verified reviewers all started where you are now.

Try the Aeyla Dual Pillow — £69
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References

  1. [1] Boes CJ. "C2 myelopathy and occipital neuralgia: C2 and C3 nerve roots involvement." Cephalgia, 2010; 30(7): 789–795. Nerve compression mechanism review.
  2. [2] Independent osteopath evaluation data on file: Aeyla Sleep Lab, 2024. 12 subjects, including 3 with clinically diagnosed occipital neuralgia. 14-night observation protocol.
  3. [3] Vanelderen P, et al. "Occipital Neuralgia." Pain Practice, 2010; 10(2): 137–144. Clinical definition, diagnostic criteria, and conservative management options.