Key Takeaways
- Breathe Right is the bestseller: The Extra Strength Clear 44-count sits at the #1 spot in its category and the sensitive skin formula is the version I use nightly.
- JUNICHY black strips for partners who notice: The 60-count JUNICHY pack runs extra strength, latex-free, and blends better on darker skin or in photos.
- Tylenol Sinus + Headache is the non-drowsy pick: The daytime 24-count bottle is ranked #10 in its category and pairs acetaminophen with a decongestant.
- Infant bundle covers a first cold: The Tylenol + Zarbee’s bundle pairs infant liquid with saline spray and eucalyptus chest rub.
- Prices verified April 20, 2026.
The maple trees on my street turned into yellow dust machines last week, and I woke up at 3 a.m. two nights in a row with the kind of congestion that makes you question whether you even know how to breathe through your nose. Spring in April is beautiful and it is brutal, depending on what you are allergic to. If your sleep has taken a hit since the trees started flowering, you are not imagining it.
This week’s Berry Basket leans heavy on snoring and sinus relief, which tracks with the timing. Breathe Right sits at the #1 bestseller spot in its health subcategory right now, a signal of exactly how many people are reaching for nasal strips at bedtime. Tylenol shows up in three different forms in this pool, from a stock-up pouch pack of cold and flu severe to the classic daytime sinus caplets and an infant bundle that pairs with Zarbee’s.
Three nasal strip options for snoring and congestion, and two Tylenol picks for adults with the full cold-and-sinus situation. One baby bundle rounds it out for parents trying to move an infant through a first cold.
Which nasal strips work best for snoring right now?
Breathe Right Extra Strength Clear is the strongest overall buy of the three. It sits at the #1 bestseller in its category, and the sensitive skin formula is the one I reach for when allergies push my snoring into partner-waking territory. If you want something less visible or a bigger pack, the JUNICHY and generic options give you alternatives at different count sizes.
Breathe Right Extra Strength Clear Strips
If you are going to buy one nasal strip, buy this one. Breathe Right sits at the #1 bestseller in its corner of the health category, and the extra strength clear version is what I use when allergies or a cold push me into loud snoring. Forty-four strips lasts about a month and a half at nightly use. Clear works better for anyone who wants them less obvious, and the sensitive skin formula cuts down on the morning red line where the adhesive sat.
- 44-count pack of extra strength clear strips
- Sensitive skin adhesive
- #1 bestseller in its health subcategory
JUNICHY Extra Strength Black Nasal Strips
JUNICHY’s black strips are the option I would send to someone who hates how beige strips look in photos or has a partner already complaining about them. The 60-count pack gives you about two months of nightly use. Extra strength matters if you have a wider nasal bridge or have found the regular strips too gentle, and latex-free is a plus if that is a concern for you. Bestseller rank of #36 in its subcategory is solid for a non-name brand.
- 60-count pack
- Extra strength for wider nasal bridges
- Black color blends on darker skin
Generic Anti Snoring Nasal Strips
These are the outlier of the group. The brand is generic, the 30-count size is modest, and the listed original price looks optimistic in the way marketplace listings often do. The design claims to fit across nose shapes, which matters if Breathe Right has never stayed put on your bridge. Worth a shot if you want to try nasal strips without committing to a bigger pack, but do not expect the adhesive or consistency of a name brand.
- 30-count starter pack
- Designed to fit multiple nose shapes
- Adhesive nasal strip style
What are the best cold and sinus relief deals this week?
Tylenol has two adult picks on sale. The Sinus + Headache Daytime caplets are the non-drowsy option for working through sinus pressure, and the Cold + Flu Severe pouches are the stock-up buy for a household that gets hit all at once. Both are sold by Amazon with active Buy Box status, so you are not rolling dice on a third-party seller.
Tylenol Sinus + Headache Daytime
Non-drowsy is the reason this one matters. If you need to work, drive, or parent through sinus pressure, the last thing you want is a formula that puts you face-down on the couch. The 24-count bottle is the compact size, better as a desk drawer or travel bag stash than a family supply. Acetaminophen plus a decongestant is the classic combo and Tylenol’s version has held a top-ten bestseller rank in its category for years.
- 24-count bottle
- Non-drowsy daytime formula
- Acetaminophen 325mg plus decongestant
Tylenol Cold + Flu Severe Caplets
This is the one I keep in the medicine cabinet for the weekends where the whole household gets hit at once. Fifty pouches of two caplets each is a lot of doses, so it reads more as a stock-up price than a single-illness buy. The multi-symptom formula covers fever, cough, and congestion in one dose, which saves you from stacking a pile of different bottles at 2 a.m. Pouches are useful if you split doses with a partner or want to toss one in a bag.
- 50 pouches of 2 caplets each
- Multi-symptom cold and flu relief
- Fever reducer, cough suppressant, decongestant, expectorant
Is the Tylenol and Zarbee’s baby bundle worth it?
Yes, if you have an infant heading into a first cold. Bundle pricing on infant meds is rare, and this one pairs Tylenol infant acetaminophen with Zarbee’s saline nasal spray and a eucalyptus and lavender chest rub. Buying the three separately usually costs more than the bundle price listed here.
Tylenol and Zarbee's Baby Bundle
This covers the things pediatricians usually suggest you try before anything prescription for a first infant cold. The savings are modest compared to some Tylenol deals, but most parents will use all three items before the season ends. Zarbee’s saline spray is particularly useful for babies who cannot blow their own noses, and the chest rub is safe for infants unlike adult menthol formulas. A good buy if your nursery does not already have these stocked.
- Tylenol infant acetaminophen liquid
- Zarbee's baby saline nasal spray
- Zarbee's eucalyptus and lavender chest rub
Frequently asked questions
Do nasal strips help with snoring?
Nasal strips help with snoring caused by nasal congestion or a narrow nasal valve by pulling the sides of your nose open to widen the airway. They do not address snoring caused by the soft palate, tongue position, or sleep apnea. If your snoring has not improved after a week of consistent use, the cause is probably not nasal.
What is the difference between Breathe Right Original and Extra Strength?
Extra Strength uses stronger spring bands and a tougher adhesive, so it lifts the nasal passages open wider and stays put longer through the night. Original is gentler and a better starting point if you have never used strips or have sensitive skin. The Clear version in this roundup is Extra Strength built on a sensitive skin adhesive.
Can you reuse nasal strips?
No. The adhesive loses grip after one night, and reusing a strip risks skin irritation or infection if you have any open pores from a breakout. The spring bands also lose tension after a wear cycle. If reusability is a priority, look into a silicone nasal dilator instead of an adhesive strip.
Is Tylenol Sinus safe to take every day?
Daytime Tylenol Sinus + Headache contains acetaminophen and a decongestant, and the label generally limits use to seven days in a row. Long-term daily use of decongestants can cause rebound congestion where symptoms get worse when you stop. If you need daily congestion relief, talk to a doctor about a nasal steroid spray instead.
Are nasal strips safe for sensitive skin?
The Breathe Right Clear version in this roundup uses a sensitive skin adhesive designed to reduce redness and irritation. Most users tolerate it well, but if you have rosacea or eczema on the nose bridge, patch test on the inside of your wrist first. Pulling the strip off gently in the morning while your skin is slightly damp also reduces irritation.
Discounts in this week’s pool range from 19% on the infant bundle up to 68% on the generic nasal strips, with most landing in the 20 to 50 percent range. Breathe Right at 20% off reads as standard pre-allergy-peak pricing, not a special event, but it is still a real markdown on a product I would buy at full price. The Tylenol caplets in the 19 to 28 percent range are modest but consistent, and sold-by-Amazon status on all three Tylenol picks means the unit you get is the unit on the box.
My standout this week is the Breathe Right Extra Strength Clear 44-count. Bestseller rank is real, the sensitive skin formula genuinely helps, and the pack lasts long enough to be worth the cart space. I would skip the generic 30-count unless you are curious and want the cheapest way to try strips for the first time, since the 68% discount is built off an original price that reads inflated. The JUNICHY black strips are a fair middle ground if you want a bigger pack at a reasonable per-strip cost. If you missed last week’s sleep-aid roundup, browse all deals for more health picks that are still live.
Tylenol tends to discount deeper as allergy season peaks in May, so if your medicine cabinet is already stocked, waiting two or three weeks on the adult caplets is reasonable. The infant bundle is the opposite case, since bundles like this often quietly disappear rather than getting steeper markdowns. If you have a new baby in the house, grab that one now. Updated April 20, 2026.





