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The easiest change now is to practice side sleeping, add a little pillow support, and make small bedtime tweaks before your bump gets heavier. You do not need to stay in one perfect position all night.
If you are awake at 2:00 AM wondering whether rolling onto your back is a problem, you are far from the only one. Sleep can feel a little steadier in the second trimester, and many pregnant women still average about 7.5 hours a night, which makes this a good time to set up better habits before discomfort ramps up. You will leave with a simple plan for which side to choose, where to put pillows, and what to change tonight for more comfort.
This article is general information, not a substitute for your own prenatal advice. Get urgent care right away for heavy bleeding, fainting, chest pain, severe shortness of breath, or a sudden severe headache or vision changes, which fit urgent maternal warning signs.
Why the second trimester is the right time to adjust
Use the easier stretch while you have it
The second trimester often brings better sleep because nausea, breast tenderness, and constant bathroom trips may ease a bit. That does not mean sleep is perfect, but it does give you a useful window to practice a setup that will be easier to keep later on.
Small changes now can prevent bigger sleep problems later
Sleep problems are common in pregnancy, with one study of more than 7,000 pregnant women finding that most reported them. Poor sleep in the second trimester is also tied to higher stress, lower quality of life, and pregnancy complications, so comfort changes are not just about feeling cozy. They are part of taking care of yourself.

Which side to choose and which positions to limit
Aim for side sleeping, not perfection
After about 20 weeks, side sleeping is the safest default, and both the left and right sides are considered safe. If one hip gets sore, switching sides is fine. The goal is not to freeze in one pose. It is to make side sleeping your home base.
Treat that 20-week point as a habit cue rather than a hard cutoff. Research linking supine sleep with problems is strongest in late pregnancy, so the practical takeaway is to make side sleeping your default and roll back over if you wake up flat on your back.
Why the left side gets extra attention
Left-side sleeping can support blood flow and may ease swelling and reflux. That is why many providers suggest it as the first side to try. Still, if your right side is the only side that feels good for a while, that is usually better than lying awake fighting your body.
Position |
Best use in the second trimester |
Possible downside |
Simple adjustment |
Left side |
Best default, especially later in the trimester |
Hip or shoulder pressure |
Pillow between knees and under belly |
Right side |
Also safe if it feels better |
Reflux may feel worse for some people |
Same pillow setup, switch sides as needed |
Back |
Better not to settle here after about 20 weeks |
Can worsen snoring, heartburn, breathing, and circulation |
Roll to a side and place a pillow behind your back |
Stomach |
Often still okay early on if it feels comfortable |
Usually becomes awkward fast as your bump grows |
Stop when it feels strained or compressed |
Pillow setup that actually helps
Start with the simplest support first
A pillow between your knees and one under your belly can make side sleeping much easier because they reduce the pull on your hips and lower back. If you only try one thing tonight, start there.

More support can make a real difference
This is where full-body support can make a real difference. I have heard from so many moms who love the Momcozy U Shaped Pregnancy Pillow (Cooling Fabric version) once side sleeping starts feeling less automatic, especially if they run warm at night and want belly, hip, and knee support without constantly rebuilding a pile of pillows.
A randomized trial in late pregnancy found better sleep quality and better comfort with a pregnancy pillow. The pillow group had a much lower average sleep-disturbance score, 4.03 versus 8.12, and a higher comfort score, 65.7 versus 50.9. The study was in the last trimester, not the second, but it is a useful sign that body support matters.
You do not need a giant pillow to get relief
Support behind your back, under your upper arm, or along your abdomen can help even if you are using regular bed pillows instead of a specialty maternity pillow. Many tired moms do well with three pieces: one pillow for the head, one between the knees, and one to hug or tuck under the bump.
Small fixes for the wake-ups that start in the second trimester
For hip pain and lower back pain
A pillow between the knees helps align the hips and lower back. If your top leg keeps sliding forward, add a second folded pillow or blanket so your knee and ankle land at a similar height. That small change can take some of the twist out of your pelvis.
For heartburn, snoring, and that “I can’t get comfortable” feeling
Left-side sleep can help with reflux, and a little upper-body elevation can help heartburn and breathing. Try eating a smaller dinner, finishing it at least 2 hours before bed, and avoiding lying down right after you eat. If your nose feels stuffy, the same slight elevation may help you feel less blocked.

For rolling over, restlessness, and constant wake-ups
If your pressure points keep changing week to week, Momcozy U Pro Pregnancy Pillow can be a nice fit because the adjustable support lets you change what your back, belly, or hips need instead of buying another pillow later in pregnancy.
People naturally change position through the night because sleep stages shift about every 90 minutes. So if you keep moving, that does not mean you are doing anything wrong. Roll slowly, keep your path clear of heavy blankets, and limit big drinks in the last 1 to 2 hours before bedtime if bathroom trips are breaking up your sleep.
What is common and what deserves a call to your provider
Common and frustrating, but often normal
Leg cramps, swollen feet, lower back pain, vivid dreams, constipation, heartburn, and nasal congestion are all common in the second trimester. These can make sleep feel much worse without automatically meaning something is wrong.
Do not ignore breathing symptoms
Snoring with pauses in breathing, gasping awake, severe insomnia, ongoing heartburn, or mood-related sleep problems should get a provider check-in. Sleep apnea during pregnancy is linked with risks such as preterm delivery, preeclampsia, and gestational diabetes, so breathing changes are worth taking seriously.

Back sleeping can give useful warning signs
Back sleeping later in pregnancy can trigger dizziness, shortness of breath, low blood pressure, and more back or hemorrhoid pain. If that is happening, treat it as a sign to reset onto your side and bring it up at your next visit, or sooner if the symptoms are strong or keep happening.
- Get urgent care right away if you have heavy bleeding, fainting, chest pain, severe shortness of breath, or a sudden severe headache or vision changes, which fit urgent maternal warning signs.
- Contact your OB or midwife the same day or next day if snoring is new or clearly worse, you are gasping awake, someone notices breathing pauses, or you are suddenly very sleepy in the daytime, since sleep disorders deserve a real check-in during pregnancy.
- Ask for individualized positioning advice sooner if you have high blood pressure, preeclampsia symptoms, heart disease, twins, or major spine or pelvic pain, because hypertension and preeclampsia in pregnancy can change how quickly symptoms need attention.
Practical Next Steps
Build a setup you can repeat half-asleep
A regular sleep schedule, a darker quieter room, and short early naps if you need them can make your new sleep position easier to keep. The goal is not perfect sleep. It is fewer wake-ups that turn into long, frustrating stretches.
Keep the plan simple enough to use tonight
About 30 minutes of daytime movement and a slower bedtime routine can make rolling, settling, and side sleeping less annoying. Think easy, not elaborate: dinner a little earlier, phone down sooner, pillows placed before you get into bed.
- Set up side sleeping as your default, with the left side first if it feels comfortable.
- Put one pillow between your knees and one under your belly.
- Add a pillow behind your back if you keep rolling flat.
- Raise your head and chest a little if reflux or stuffy breathing is waking you up.
- Finish dinner at least 2 hours before bed and keep late drinks light.
- Call your provider if you are gasping, having breathing pauses, or dealing with severe ongoing sleep disruption.
FAQ
Q: Is right-side sleeping okay in the second trimester?
A: Yes. Both sides are considered safe. The left side may feel better for swelling or reflux, but the right side is still a reasonable choice when it is more comfortable.
Q: What if I wake up on my back?
A: Do not panic. Most people move during sleep. Just roll back onto your side and use a pillow behind your back if you keep drifting there.
Q: Do I need a pregnancy pillow?
A: Not necessarily. A pillow between your knees and one under your belly often helps a lot. A larger maternity pillow is more useful if you turn often or feel sore in several places at once.
References
- https://www.sleepfoundation.org/pregnancy/sleeping-during-2nd-trimester
- https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/is-your-sleep-position-helping-or-hurting-you
- https://www.hingehealth.com/resources/articles/pregnancy-sleeping-positions/
- https://integrishealth.org/resources/on-your-health/2026/march/what-are-some-safe-sleep-positions-during-pregnancy
- https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-026-08881-0
- https://progyny.com/education/pregnancy/sleep-comfort-and-safety-during-pregnancy/