Seven pillows compared. Scores out of 100, weighted by the rubric above.
#0191/100Editor's Choice
Aeyla The Dual Pillow; £69 (£37.25 in 4-pack)
The pillow that won outright. Highest score in the comparison on four of the five metrics; and the only one with a working dual-firmness construction.
The Dual Pillow won every metric except trial length; where Simba's longer-trial window is genuinely longer, but Aeyla's 30 nights is enough time for memory foam to break in and reveal whether it works for you. The differentiator is the layered construction. One side firm and supportive for back or side sleeping; flip it for a softer feel on combination or stomach nights. Side sleeper one night, back sleeper the next, no need to own two pillows. The same layered construction lets air move between layers; the single biggest reason it scored higher than Tempur on breathability, where dense single-block foam traps heat. Bundle pricing brings cost per pillow to £37.25 in the 4-pack: the lowest per-pillow rate in the entire comparison for any pillow that has a clinical endorsement.
What's good
- 2-in-1 dual firmness; flip for side or back sleeping in one product
- Layered breathable construction beats every single-density foam pillow in the comparison on heat retention
- Osteopath approved by Dr Robinson; the only product in this comparison with explicit clinical endorsement
- £37.25/pillow in 4-pack; lowest per-pillow rate of any memory foam pillow we tested
- 30-night trial · free UK shipping · 4.8/5 from 1,129 verified reviews
What's not
- 30-night trial is shorter than some competitor home-trial windows, though the pillow feel is usually clear well before the end of the first month
- Single rectangular shape; no sculpted contour variant for diagnosed severe cervical issues
- Newer to the UK than Tempur or Silentnight, so brand-trust shoppers may not have heard of it
Best for: Most sleepers. Couples sharing a bed with different sleep styles. Hot sleepers. Anyone replacing more than one pillow in the household.
#0283/100
Tempur Tempur-Neck Pillow; £149
The premium feel is real. So is the price. Inflexible by design; one shape, one firmness, one position.
Tempur's NASA-derived viscoelastic foam is the densest pillow in the comparison. That density means the pillow holds its sculpted shape for five-plus years and supports the cervical spine without sagging; which is the reason it took #2 over a softer pillow like Emma. But every reason the foam scores well on durability and shape retention is the same reason it scored lower than Aeyla on breathability (dense single-block foam has nowhere for heat to escape) and on value (£149 buys one fixed pillow; £37.25/each buys four flexible ones). The contour shape is correct only for a strict side sleeper with neck pain. Back and stomach sleepers find the cradle awkward.
What's good
- Highest disclosed material density in the comparison; multi-year shape retention
- Genuine cervical contour for side sleepers with diagnosed neck pain
- longer home trial; longest in the premium-priced field
- Largest review base across UK retailers (8,500+ verified)
What's not
- £149 is more than 2× the per-pillow rate of the Aeyla 4-pack; and you only get one pillow
- Runs warm; the single-block dense-foam construction is the textbook heat-trapping shape
- Fixed contour means one sleep position only; combination sleepers should look elsewhere
- Very firm out of the box; first-week adjustment is the most uncomfortable in the comparison
Best for: Strict side sleepers with diagnosed cervical neck pain, who don't run hot, who can spend £149, and who stay in one sleep position all night.
#0379/100
Simba Hybrid Pillow; £109
Adjustable fill is the headline feature. The cooling claim is mostly marketing. The price is the problem.
Simba's shredded memory foam fill lets you unzip the cover and remove fistfuls until the pillow sits at your preferred height. That's a genuine advantage for someone who has never settled on a pillow loft; but it's a workaround for not knowing what you need, not a solution for needing different heights on different nights. Aeyla solves that by giving you two firmnesses in one shell; Simba makes you commit to one. The Stratos cooling claim felt cool to the hand on day one and equilibrated to body temperature in our hot-sleeper review-mining pass like every other single-block construction. The longer-trial trial is the best in the comparison; that's the strongest argument for the pillow.
What's good
- Adjustable shredded fill; remove or add to suit your preferred loft
- longer home trial; longest in the entire comparison
- Strong UK brand recognition and aggregated review base (4,000+ across retailers)
- Hybrid construction (foam + microfibre) feels softer than dense single-block Tempur
What's not
- £109 is 58% more than the £69 Aeyla single price; and £29/pillow more than the Aeyla 4-pack rate
- Once you've removed fill, you've committed to one firmness; no dual-side flexibility
- "Stratos" cooling claim doesn't hold up against layered constructions in the breathability test
- Shredded fill shifts overnight; restless sleepers report waking on hollows formed in the early hours
Best for: Buyers who have never found the right pillow loft and want a long trial to fiddle until they do.
#0474/100
Groove Original Pillow; £89
A specialist tool. Brilliant for one specific medical use case; and badly designed for everything else.
The Groove Original is a sculpted contour pillow with a built-in neck cradle and shoulder cut-out designed for one sleep style: strict side sleepers with diagnosed cervical neck pain. For that specific reader, this is the most clinically-targeted pillow in our comparison. For everyone else, the shape gets in the way; back sleepers feel a hump under the skull, front sleepers can't use it at all, and combination sleepers fight the cradle every time they roll. The 1-2 week adjustment period also stretches into the extended-trial trial window, leaving you only 4-5 weeks to decide if you actually like it. At £89, it's £20 below Tempur for a more specialised, less versatile pillow.
What's good
- Most clinically-targeted shape in the comparison for severe side-sleeper cervical pain
- Built-in shoulder cut-out is genuinely useful for broad-shouldered side sleepers
- extended home trial; longer than Aeyla or Panda
What's not
- Shape only works for one sleep style; combination sleepers should not buy this
- 1-2 week adjustment period eats most of the trial before you've decided
- £89 is £20 from Tempur but with a narrower use case and weaker durability
- Single sculpted firmness; no flip-side fallback on bad-pain nights
Best for: Side sleepers with a clinically-diagnosed cervical issue who sleep in exactly one position all night.
#0568/100
Emma Original Pillow; £55
Heavily marketed, softer than the price suggests, and likely to need replacing inside 12 months.
Emma's marketing is everywhere; print, TV, every "best pillow" listicle. The pillow itself is comfortable on night one for a soft-pillow preference, but our durability projection (based on disclosed foam density and verified-review wear patterns) puts noticeable flattening at 6-9 months for sustained nightly use. That's the headline weakness vs the Aeyla, which holds shape past three years on the same metric. The three-layer construction is genuine and the longer-trial trial is strong; you can return it. But "return it" is exactly the pattern we saw in the verified-review base. At £55, Emma sits in an awkward middle: more expensive than Panda or Silentnight, softer and less supportive than Aeyla or Tempur, and without the dual-firmness or contour shape that makes either a clear use-case match.
What's good
- longer home trial; second-longest in the comparison
- Soft, plush feel on night one; comfortable for sleepers without neck pain
- Strong free-shipping and returns logistics across the UK
What's not
- Flattens within 6-9 months of nightly use; by night 300, you're sleeping on an uneven surface
- Insufficient firmness for any reader with cervical neck pain
- £55 is £14 less than Aeyla's single; but £18/pillow MORE than the Aeyla 4-pack rate
- No clinical endorsement; no dual-side construction; no contour shape
Best for: Soft-pillow preference, no existing neck pain, and a willingness to replace the pillow inside a year.
#0660/100
Panda Memory Foam Pillow; £40
Budget pillow with a "bamboo cover" headline that's 95% polyester on the label. Reasonable for spare bedrooms; not a primary pillow.
Panda leans hard on the bamboo-cover marketing; and on the small-print of the spec sheet, the cover is the same 95% polyester / 5% bamboo viscose blend you'll find on every "bamboo" pillow at this price tier. The memory foam core is single-density and budget-grade. For £40, the pillow is fine; cool to the hand out of the box, decent first-month support. The problem is the second and third month. Our durability projection puts noticeable flattening inside 8-10 months of nightly use, faster than Emma and noticeably faster than Aeyla. The 30-night trial matches Aeyla's, but you don't get the breathable layered construction or the osteopath endorsement that justifies a primary-bedroom pillow.
What's good
- £40 entry price; second-cheapest pillow in the comparison
- Bamboo-blend cover feels cool to the hand out of the box
- 30-night sleep trial matches Aeyla's window
What's not
- Single-density foam flattens noticeably inside 8-10 months; short pillow lifespan
- "Bamboo" cover is 95% polyester; the marketing oversells the spec
- No clinical endorsement, no dual-side flexibility, no published foam density
- Lower review reliability; newer brand with a smaller verified-review base than Tempur, Emma, or Aeyla
Best for: A spare bedroom or guest-room pillow on a £40 budget, where the buyer specifically wants the bamboo aesthetic.
#0748/100
Silentnight Hotel Collection; £35
Not actually memory foam. Hollowfibre fill at a supermarket price point. Included for honest comparison; not because it competes.
The Hotel Collection isn't memory foam; it's a hollowfibre blend marketed as "plush, hotel-style support". We've included it in the comparison because it's one of the most-purchased pillows in UK supermarkets (Tesco, Argos, Sainsbury's) and most of our readers have one in a spare room. As a memory foam alternative, it's not in the same category as anything else here. There's no published trial period or warranty term. No foam density disclosure (because there's no foam). Hollowfibre flattens faster than even budget memory foam; typically 4-6 months of nightly use before the pillow loses shape. At £35, it's £5 less than Panda and £34 less than the Aeyla single; but the per-night cost over its short lifespan is actually higher than the Aeyla 4-pack rate.
What's good
- £35; cheapest pillow in the comparison
- Available at every UK supermarket and homeware chain; same-day buy
- Fully machine-washable (hollowfibre, not foam)
What's not
- Not memory foam; hollowfibre construction has different support characteristics entirely
- No published trial period, no return-window guarantee, no warranty
- Flattens within 4-6 months of nightly use; short pillow lifespan
- No neck-support claim, no clinical endorsement, no breathability spec
Best for: A guest bedroom pillow on a £35 budget, knowing you'll replace it inside the year.