Intevision Wedge Pillow: My Experience
My acid reflux was brutal at night. Plus my partner snored like crazy. I kept seeing these wedge pillows everywhere online, but honestly? A foam triangle fixing real sleep problems seemed like BS.
Bought one anyway. Here’s what actually happened.
What You’re Getting
It’s got two foam layers, gel memory foam on top, then this dense polyurethane stuff underneath. They’ve got some U.S. patent on it, which I guess matters since most wedge pillows are just basic foam blocks.
The rundown:
- CertiPUR-US foam (supposedly no nasty chemicals)
- Bamboo cover that’s pretty soft
- Can upgrade to Egyptian cotton if you’re fancy
- Air channels between the layers
Two sizes: regular one’s 25″ x 24″ x 12″, or you can get the big boy at 33″ x 30.5″ x 7.5″.

Did It Actually Work?
Acid Reflux
Yeah, it worked. When you prop yourself up 6-8 inches, gravity keeps that stomach acid where it belongs instead of creeping up your throat. Some study said it cuts nighttime reflux by like 67%.
Took about three nights before I noticed real improvement. I’m not kidding, I actually slept through the night without waking up with that burning feeling. Some people on Amazon said they ditched their nighttime meds completely, but I’m not there yet.
Snoring
This one’s tricky. Elevating your head does open up your airways by keeping all that throat tissue from collapsing.
What I found:
- If you snore through your nose: probably gonna help
- Allergy snoring: definitely helps with the drainage stuff
- Mouth breathers: eh, not so much
My partner’s snoring got a bit better but didn’t disappear. Don’t throw out your CPAP machine or anything.
Pain and Other Stuff
Pretty good for circulation. When you elevate your legs, blood flows better and reduces swelling. I used it after a minor surgery and it was nice. Pregnant women apparently love these things.
How’s the Quality?
The foam’s dense enough (3-5 pounds per cubic foot, whatever that means) to actually support you without turning into a pancake. The gel cooling thing isn’t just marketing—it really doesn’t get as hot as regular memory foam.
Bamboo cover feels nice against your skin and supposedly fights bacteria. Throws in the washing machine fine. The Egyptian cotton upgrade costs extra but feels way better if you’re picky about that stuff.
Six months in, the foam’s still holding its shape at 95% thickness. Most people I read about are still using theirs after two years, so it seems to last.
How’s It Stack Up?
Versus MedSlant
- Intevision runs $80-120
- MedSlant’s like $150-200
- Intevision’s got this adjustable headrest thing that MedSlant doesn’t
- Pretty obvious which one’s the better deal
Versus Brentwood Home
Both do similar things. Intevision’s two-layer setup feels more comfortable though. Brentwood talks a lot about dust mites, Intevision focuses more on recovery stuff.
What Other People Say
Amazon’s got it at 4.3 out of 5 stars from over 1,200 reviews. About 78% of people say it actually helped their problems.
Common complaints:
- Takes about a week to get used to sleeping elevated
- Some people wished they’d gotten the bigger size
- Firmness is subjective—some want it softer, others firmer
Sleep experts rated it:
- Back sleepers: 8.5/10
- Side sleepers: 7.8/10
- Stomach sleepers: 4.5/10 (basically don’t bother)
Which Size Should You Get?
For acid reflux: go with the standard 12″ height. The steeper angle works better.
For snoring: the extra-large 7.5″ with the headrest is probably your best bet.
For recovery stuff: standard gives you more positioning options.
Works on any mattress I tried—memory foam, hybrid, whatever. If you’ve got a really soft mattress, might take some getting used to.
Taking Care of It
Shows up vacuum-packed like those mattresses you see on TV. Give it 48 hours to fully expand—don’t rush it. Wash the cover weekly in cold water, spot clean the foam monthly if it gets gross. Thing weighs 3.2 pounds so you can actually travel with it if needed.
Where to Buy and What It Costs
Current prices:
- Standard: $89-109
- Extra-large: $119-139
- Cotton upgrade: $29-39
Best places to get it:
- Amazon: fast shipping, easy returns
- Target: 90-day return policy
- Straight from the company: full warranty coverage
You get a 30-day trial and two-year warranty. If you’ve got HSA or FSA money, it qualifies with a doctor’s note.
My Take
Look, if you’re dealing with acid reflux or mild sleep problems, it’s worth the $90-140. Way cheaper than ongoing doctor visits and prescription stuff.
The 30-day trial takes the risk out of it. Just know it takes about a week to adjust to sleeping propped up. It’s not gonna solve every sleep problem you’ve got, but for what it claims to do, it actually does it.
No magic here—just physics and decent foam that doesn’t fall apart.



