How and Why You Should Use an Intimacy Pillow
Most people have tried improvising with regular pillows during sex. Stacking them, folding them, shoving them under hips at weird angles, and still ending up in positions that feel slightly off or require more effort than they should. There's a better solution, and more people are discovering it than you'd expect.
Intimacy pillows are purpose-built for this. Here's everything you need to know to actually use one well.
What an Intimacy Pillow Actually Is
An intimacy pillow isn't just a firm cushion. It's a specifically shaped support tool designed to hold its form under the weight and movement of two adults, something a regular throw pillow categorically can't do.
The most common shapes are:
- Wedge: Triangular, angled support. Great for elevating hips, thighs, or knees and holding that angle consistently without slipping.
- Ramp: Longer, flatter incline. Designed primarily for back and torso support. Usually paired with a wedge.
- Mount: A pillow with an attachment point for a hands-free toy designed for solo or partnered use where hands-free positioning matters.
What they share: high-density foam cores that don't compress under pressure, and removable machine-washable covers. Regular pillows flatten out, shift around, and need constant readjusting. Honestly, the difference is immediately obvious once you've used a proper one.
Why Bother? The Real Benefits
The appeal goes beyond novelty. There are genuinely practical reasons these exist.
Better angles, less effort. Certain positions require one person to hold themselves at a specific angle for extended periods. That's tiring. A pillow that holds the angle means you can focus on what you're actually doing rather than constantly compensating for gravity.
Reduced joint strain. People with hip, knee, back, or neck sensitivities know that some positions are simply off the table without modifications. An intimacy pillow can make those positions accessible again by distributing weight and reducing the demand on vulnerable joints.
Pelvic positioning. The angle of the pelvis significantly affects depth, access, and comfort particularly for anal and penetrative sex. A wedge under the hips can shift that angle enough to make a meaningful difference for both partners.
Opens up new positions. Some positions that look good in theory are just awkward in practice without support. A wedge or ramp provides the lift or leverage that makes them actually work.
Here's the thing you don't need to have any specific need to benefit from one. Comfort and ease are reason enough.
Positions Worth Trying
Missionary With Hip Elevation
Place a wedge under the receiving partner's hips. The pelvic tilt this creates changes the angle of penetration and can make G-spot or prostate stimulation significantly more accessible. It also reduces lower back strain for the partner on top by changing the geometry of the whole position.
On Top
Kneeling for extended periods puts real strain on the knees. Placing a wedge under both knees while on top reduces that strain, maintains better posture, and actually requires less effort to sustain the position which is a win for endurance.
From Behind
Height differences between partners can make doggy-style uncomfortable or awkward to maintain. A wedge under the hips of the receiving partner lifts them to a height that works for both people, reduces the angle strain on the lower back, and keeps the position sustainable without constant readjustment.
Oral
Whether the receiving partner is on their back or stomach, hip elevation through a wedge makes access easier for the giving partner — less neck strain, better angle, and more comfort all around. A ramp under the shoulders and head is a solid alternative if you'd rather keep hips flat.
Side-Lying Positions
Spooning or side-lying penetration tends to involve awkward hip angles that make finding the right position feel like a geometry problem. A pillow between the knees adjusts the hip angle enough to make side-lying positions significantly more comfortable and easier to sustain.
Tips for Actually Using One Well
A few practical notes before you get started:
- Talk about it first. Bringing anything new into the bedroom including a pillow is worth a quick conversation beforehand. It doesn't need to be a formal discussion, but a brief "want to try this?" sets the right tone.
- Keep it clean. Most intimacy pillows have removable covers specifically because they need regular washing. Wash the cover after each use. The foam core itself doesn't need to be submerged spot clean if anything gets through.
- Start simple. You don't need to immediately commit to the most complex position. A wedge under the hips during missionary is the lowest-stakes starting point and gives you a sense of how the pillow changes the dynamic before experimenting further.
- Adjust positioning until it feels right. There's no single correct placement. Move the pillow slightly forward, back, or sideways until the angle works for both people. Real talk - a few seconds of adjustment at the start saves a lot of mid-session readjusting.
- Solo use is completely valid. Intimacy pillows aren't only for partnered sex. The ergonomic support applies equally to solo use, and many people find them useful for positioning with toys or just maintaining comfortable angles without straining.
What to Look For Before You Buy
Not all intimacy pillows are worth the money. The ones that actually deliver have these qualities:
| Feature | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| High-density foam core | Won't compress and flatten under body weight |
| Removable cover | Easy cleaning between uses |
| Machine-washable cover | Hygienic for regular use |
| Non-slip surface | Stays in place during movement |
| Appropriate size for your bed | Too small and it shifts; too large and it gets in the way |
Avoid anything marketed as an intimacy pillow that uses soft, compressible fill. If it flattens like a regular pillow, it behaves like one, and you're back to the same problem you started with.
A good intimacy pillow isn't a luxury or a novelty. For a lot of people, it's the thing that makes certain positions actually comfortable rather than theoretically enjoyable. And once you've used one that genuinely holds its shape and angle, you understand pretty quickly why regular pillows were never going to cut it.
This article is for informational purposes only.

