Is Sleeping on Your Stomach Bad for You?

Potential Effects of Sleeping on Your Stomach
Neck Pain
Back Pain
Shoulder Pain
Whether you raise your arms up near your pillow or stretch them out to the sides, stomach sleeping forces your shoulders into an awkward position, Okubadejo says.
Facial Wrinkles
Is It Safe to Sleep on Your Stomach During Pregnancy?
How to Stop Sleeping on Your Stomach: 3 Tips
If you're sleeping on your stomach because of problems like acid reflux, snoring, or back pain, you'll want to address these underlying issues first, says Rebecca Gonzalez, a senior specialist physical therapist at Northwell Staten Island University Hospital in New York City. The following techniques may also help.
1. Use Pillows to Your Advantage
Placing a body pillow in front of you while side sleeping can have a similar effect, says Joseph Hribick, DPT, an orthopedic manual therapist and a clinical assistant professor of physical therapy at Lebanon Valley College in Annville, Pennsylvania. “It can also provide the comfort and pressure that stomach sleepers are accustomed to without putting the spine in a vulnerable position,” he adds.
2. Choose a Supportive Mattress and Pillow
3. Be Patient and Consistent
It won't be easy to break the stomach sleeping habit, so be patient with yourself, Hribick says. “This change doesn't happen overnight (no pun intended) — it does take time and some patience,” Hribick says. If you wake up on your stomach, Hribick suggests slowly repositioning yourself to avoid stressing your back by moving too quickly.
While working toward a different sleep position, Hribick recommends the following to reduce the adverse effects of sleeping on your stomach.
- Place a thin pillow under your pelvis to reduce lower back stress and support your spine's natural curvature.
- Use a thin pillow under your head to keep your spine in a more neutral position. Thick pillows can force the neck, midback, and lower back into excessive extension, increasing stress and strain.
- Gently stretch your neck and back before bed and in the morning to help counteract muscle tightness, improve mobility, and alleviate discomfort.
The Takeaway
- The risks of sleeping on your stomach — including neck, back, and shoulder pain — outweigh any potential benefits.
- The best sleeping positions for health include lying on your back or side.
- Breaking the stomach-sleeping habit isn't easy but using pillows to your advantage and a medium-firm mattress may help.
- If underlying issues are prompting you to sleep on your stomach, talk to your doctor to address these.
- Is Sleeping on Your Stomach Bad? Cleveland Clinic. June 12, 2023.
- Shoen S. Sleeping on Your Stomach – Is It Bad for You? Sleep Foundation. December 21, 2023.
- Sleeping and the Spine. National Spine Health Foundation. March 15, 2024.
- Bidarian-Moniri. The Effect of the Prone Sleeping Position on Obstructive Sleep Apnoea. Acta Oto-Laryngologica. January 2015.
- Sleeping With Neck Pain: Advice from a Pain Specialist. Hospital for Special Surgery. April 4, 2023.
- Mohammed Y et al. Sleep Wrinkles Are Real. Here's How They Leave Their Mark. The University of Queensland. May 10, 2024.
- Is It Really All That Bad to Sleep on Your Back While Pregnant? Cleveland Clinic. September 23, 2024.
- Caggiari G et al. What Type of Mattress Should Be Chosen to Avoid Back Pain and Improve Sleep Quality? Review of the Literature. Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology. December 8, 2021.
- Radwan A et al. Effect of Different Pillow Designs on Promoting Sleep Comfort, Quality, and Spinal Alignment: A Systematic Review. European Journal of Integrative Medicine. February 2021.

Chester Wu, MD
Medical Reviewer
Chester Wu, MD, is double board-certified in psychiatry and sleep medicine. He cares for patients through his private practice in Houston, where he provides evaluations, medication management, and therapy for psychiatric and sleep medicine conditions.
After training at the Baylor College of Medicine and Stanford University School of Medicine, Dr. Wu established the first sleep medicine program within a psychiatric system in the United States while at the Menninger Clinic in Houston.
