Your pillow feels safe. Your routine feels normal. But the way you sleep tonight could quietly shape how your body feels for years. Most people never question their favorite side. They should. From acid creeping up your throat to subtle pressure on your heart and lungs, right-side sleeping can twist comfort into slow, invisible strain. For some, it worsens reflux. For others, it nudges snoring into something more serious.
For most healthy people, lying on the right side isn’t a dramatic medical danger, but it isn’t completely neutral either. Because the stomach curves to the left, right-side sleeping can make it easier for acid to travel upward, aggravating heartburn or reflux in those already prone to it. In others, it may pass unnoticed, yet still influence comfort over time.
Circulation and breathing can also shift subtly. Staying on one side may compress nerves or vessels, causing tingling or heaviness that fades when you roll over. Snorers or those with mild sleep apnea might find side sleeping helpful overall, but which side feels best can be highly personal. In pregnancy or with specific heart or digestive conditions, doctors often favor the left side to support blood flow. In the end, your alignment, pillow, mattress, and how you feel on waking matter more than any strict rule about the “right” side.