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Pregnancy Shoulder and Rib Pain: Why It Happens in Bed and How to Fix It

While lower back pain and sciatica often get all the attention, many women find that the real sleep-thieves during pregnancy are their ribs and shoulders. Waking up with a sharp sensation under your breast or a deep, burning ache in your shoulder blade can make the night feel endless.

Here's a look at why your upper body tends to protest at night during pregnancy, and the specific adjustments that may help.

A note before we dive in: if your shoulder or rib pain is sharp, persistent, or getting worse, it's worth getting a proper assessment before trying to self-manage it. We love referring women to our partner physios @the.mama.physio (Jess) and @misspelvichealth (Charlotte) both of whom specialise in pregnancy musculoskeletal discomfort and are worth following for practical, trustworthy advice.

Why Your Ribs and Shoulders Hurt at Night

As your pregnancy progresses, your centre of gravity shifts and your body changes shape quite rapidly. According to Pregnancy, Birth and Baby, these physical changes affect everything from your posture to your breathing — and for many women, that shows up as upper body discomfort, particularly at night.

1. Rib Cage Changes

To make room for your growing baby, your rib cage gradually widens during pregnancy. Many women find their ribs feel tender or achy as a result, and this discomfort often feels noticeably worse when lying down, when the muscles relax, and the body's weight settles differently than it does upright.

2. Side-Sleeping Pressure on the Shoulder

Side-sleeping during pregnancy is widely recommended for maintaining good blood flow, but sleeping on the same shoulder night after night can cause it to protest. The shoulder joint wasn't designed to bear the full weight of a pregnant body for eight hours straight. Many women notice that familiar "pins and needles" sensation, or a dull ache in the shoulder and arm, particularly by morning.

3. Upward Pressure as the Baby Grows

As the uterus rises and takes up more space, many women notice increased breathlessness and, in some cases, referred discomfort in the shoulder or neck. If you find rolling forward or lying flat makes this worse, experimenting with your sleep positioning can make a real difference.

How to Adjust Your Position in Bed

Most relief comes down to decompression, creating more space for your ribs and reducing the load on your shoulder joint.

Support the Upper Shoulder

Much of the shoulder discomfort many women experience comes from the top arm collapsing forward toward the mattress, which twists the spine and compresses the ribs.

  • The fix: Hug a pillow or bolster between your arms. This keeps your shoulders stacked more vertically and stops the top arm from dragging your rib cage out of alignment.

Lift the Bump to Take Pressure Off the Ribs

When you lie on your side without support, the weight of the belly can pull the spine into a gentle rotation and that twisting is often what's causing the sharp feeling in the ribs.

  • The fix: Place a firm wedge directly under the curve of your belly. Supporting the weight of the baby stops it from pulling on the muscles between your ribs while you sleep.

Adjust How You're Lying on the Lower Shoulder

If the shoulder you're lying on is the issue, you may be positioned slightly too far back on the joint.

  • The fix: Try sliding the bottom shoulder slightly forward, essentially tucking it under you a little, rather than lying directly on top of the joint. This shifts the weight to a fleshier part of your upper back and can take a lot of pressure off.

How Sleepybelly Can Help

Standard pillows are often too soft to provide the structural support needed to stop rib rotation overnight. The Sleepybelly Pregnancy Pillow is designed specifically for this. Its modular, three-piece wedge system lets you position support exactly where your body needs it.

  • Customisable placement: The wedges can be positioned to support both your bump and your back simultaneously, which keeps your torso from rolling and aggravating rib discomfort through the night.

  • Latex support that holds its shape: Unlike polyester fill that flattens within a few hours, the latex core maintains the same level of support from when you fall asleep to when you wake up, so your ribs stay lifted rather than gradually sinking into the mattress.

  • Front and back support together: Using both wedges keeps you in a stable side-lying position, which takes the cumulative pressure off the shoulder you're lying on.

For nights where the discomfort feels more like muscular tension than structural pressure, many women find that massaging the Sleepybelly Magnesium Body Cream into their side-ribs and the tops of their shoulders before settling in genuinely helps them feel more comfortable. It's a nice way to wind down and give those areas some attention before sleep.

Additional Comfort Strategies

  • Breathwork before bed: Taking a few slow, deep breaths, letting your belly expand rather than your chest, can gently ease rib tension and help many women feel calmer before sleep. Try a few minutes before lying down.

  • Check your mattress: If your mattress is very firm, your shoulder may have nowhere to settle. A soft topper can sometimes make a meaningful difference to shoulder-point pressure.

  • Get a professional assessment: If the pain is persistent or worsening, please see a women's health physio rather than continuing to self-manage. Our partners @the.mama.physio and @chloe_thepelvicphysio are excellent places to start.

The Bottom Line

Pregnancy shoulder and rib discomfort at night is usually a sign that your body is struggling to stay balanced under its new weight distribution. Using targeted support to stop the overnight twist in your torso and giving your muscles a little extra care before bed can make a real difference to how you feel in the morning.

The information in this article is general in nature and intended as comfort support only. It is not medical advice. Always consult your midwife, GP, or a qualified healthcare provider for guidance specific to your situation.

 

Read More

How to Put On Pregnancy Compression Socks Without Straining Your Belly

The Physical struggle of pulling on tight compression socks over a growing bump can cause you to strain your lower back or compress your abdomen. By transitioning to the "Inside-Out Method" and adjusting your physical posture, you can slide your garments on seamlessly without putting any pressure on your belly.

Treating compression fabric like a standard sock by scrunching it into a ring creates immense structural resistance. Instead, convert the garment into an accessible foot pocket: slide your hand inside to pinch the heel, peel the long leg sleeve backward so it is completely inside-out down to the ankle, slide your foot into the waiting pocket, and smoothly unroll the fabric up your calf. To keep your abdominal area entirely clear while doing this, use the "Cross-Ankle Lounge" posture on a couch or place your foot on a low step stool so your knees can flare naturally to the sides.

Should You Wear Compression Socks to Bed While Pregnant?

For most expectant mothers, the general rule is to avoid wearing tight, firm compression socks to sleep overnight. Graduated compression garments are specifically engineered to assist your veins in working against gravity while you are upright—standing, sitting, or walking. When you lie flat, gravity stops pulling blood and extra fluids down into your lower limbs, allowing your circulation to naturally even out. Wearing high-pressure stockings horizontally is not only unnecessary, but it also carries a risk of constriction; if the fabric bunches or rolls as you toss and turn, it can create a tight band around your calf that actively restricts blood flow.

The ideal routine is to wear your maternity compression socks for about 30 minutes during your evening wind-down, then slide them off right before you turn out the light. This short pre-bed window provides a final circulation boost to move the day's residual fluid and ease that restless, twitchy end-of-day feeling.

An overnight exception exists only if you are dealing with severe Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS) or intense throbbing that keeps you awake. In those cases, wearing a gentle, low-pressure (15-20 mmHg), breathable garment made from a soft bamboo blend is acceptable, provided it does not dig into your skin. Otherwise, you can support your nighttime circulation bare-legged by utilizing a modular pregnancy pillow to maintain a strict side-sleeping position, which keeps your heavy uterus from compressing the inferior vena cava (the main pelvic vein returning blood to your heart).

Why Pregnancy Swelling Feels Worse at Night, and What Can Help

Evening swelling, or gestational oedema, is a common pregnancy symptom caused by increased blood and fluid volume. This puffiness peaks at bedtime due to a combination of daytime gravity pulling fluids downward and your growing uterus compressing the inferior vena cava, which restricts lower-body circulation. When you finally lie flat, your body begins reabsorbing this pooled fluid to be filtered through your kidneys, resulting in a tight, throbbing sensation in your lower limbs just as you try to drift off.

To prevent this evening spike, implement a proactive routine earlier in the day. Front-load your hydration by drinking the majority of your water before 4 pm to help your kidneys flush excess fluid without keeping you awake with a full bladder. When relaxing, elevate your feet above heart level using pillows to let gravity assist your veins, and wear graduated maternity compression socks during the day to provide steady mechanical support that prevents fluid from pooling in the first place. Conclude your evening by massaging a non-greasy magnesium cream into your calves to relieve skin tightness, then settle into a supportive side-sleeping position with a modular pregnancy pillow to keep your pelvic veins completely clear of uterine pressure overnight.

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