How to Sleep on a Plane: 9 Tips That Actually Work

NTC Goods

Short answer: sleeping on a plane comes down to blocking light, supporting your head, picking the right seat, and signaling your body it's bedtime. Do a few of these and you'll land far less wrecked.

9 tips that actually work

  1. Pick a window seat — something to lean on + control over the shade, and no aisle disruptions.
  2. Block the light — a contoured sleep mask is the single biggest upgrade; light keeps your brain awake.
  3. Support your head — a neck pillow stops the head-bob that wrecks rest.
  4. Dress in layers — cabins run cold; being chilly kills sleep.
  5. Recline + buckle over the blanket — so you're not woken for seatbelt checks.
  6. Skip the screen before you try to sleep — blue light delays melatonin.
  7. Go easy on caffeine & alcohol — both fragment sleep at altitude.
  8. Set your watch to the destination and sleep on that schedule to fight jet lag.
  9. Stay hydrated — dehydration makes transit misery worse.

The comfort kit

A sleep mask, neck support and layers turn a brutal red-eye into real rest — pack them with your travel checklist, and keep your docs in one organized holder so you're not rummaging mid-flight.

FAQ

What's the #1 thing to sleep better on a plane?

Block the light — a good sleep mask makes the biggest difference for most people.


Recommended products
Build your in-flight comfort kit — sleep mask, neck support and more in Travel & Utility. Keep documents sorted with the RFID Passport Holder.

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