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35,797
3.9 out of 5 stars

Trtl Pillow Neck Support Travel Pillow

$12.59
$19.99 37% off Reference Price
Size: Adult
Color: Grey
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Top positive review
1 people found this helpful
Perfect for Long Haul Flights
By Dez16 on Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2025
I’ve used it on two round trip far east trips (11-13hrs flights both ways) and without the luxury of a window seat to lean on, this has saved my sanity & neck. It’s the only way I could sleep through those hauls comfortably while being in middle/aisle seats especially. It secures my neck & I can twist/adjust it from side to side if I want to “lean” my head one way or the other. I can still turn to chat with my fiance or the crew when they come by. I recommend.
Top critical review
221 people found this helpful
A Struggle Between Comfort and Circulation
By RandomGuy on Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2025
I wanted to love the Trtl Travel Pillow. really, I did. The promise of a scientifically engineered, ultra-supportive neck brace (sorry, “pillow”) that would finally allow me to sleep on a plane without waking up feeling like I lost a fight with the overhead bin was too good to pass up. Unfortunately, after several flights of dedicated testing, I can confidently say this: if you enjoy the sensation of being in a very mild, travel-sized guillotine, this is the product for you. The “Support” Dilemma The concept is clever. You wrap it around your neck, lean into the hidden support, and drift off into blissful, ergonomic slumber. The reality? The only way this thing provides any meaningful support is if you cinch it so tightly that you start questioning your blood flow situation. At optimal “support” level, I found myself teetering between “mildly uncomfortable” and “Is this what a giraffe feels like in a turtleneck?” If you loosen it even slightly, it becomes a $60 piece of fabric wrapped around your neck for no reason at all. And if you tighten it enough to actually hold your head up, congratulations! You now have a built-in pulse-checking device because your body will let you know very quickly when your carotid artery has had enough. In-Flight Performance My hope was to finally achieve that elusive, graceful plane nap. Instead, I spent most of my flight adjusting, readjusting, and questioning my life choices as my seat neighbor side-eyed my increasingly desperate attempts to make it work. The “lean and sleep” motion they advertise? More like “lean, start losing feeling in your jaw, panic, readjust, repeat.” The Verdict For those with an iron will, a tolerance for slight oxygen deprivation, and perhaps a slimmer neck than mine, this might work. For the rest of us? Save your money and go back to the classic awkward head-tilt-against-the-window method or invest in a real neck pillow. Or better yet, just accept that air travel is inherently uncomfortable and move on. Final Rating: 2/5 Stars – Points for innovation, deducted for it being a personal tourniquet for the worst possible location

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