Key Takeaways

Summer sleep is a different animal. You crack the windows for the first warm nights, the box fan starts running, and somewhere around 2am you discover that pollen, dry air from the AC, and a clogged nose can turn a quiet sleeper into a freight train. June is when a lot of people go looking for a fix, either for themselves or for the person lying next to them who has stopped pretending it isn’t a problem.

Going through the health deals for this week’s Berry Basket, the snoring aisle was unusually full. Three different nasal strip listings are sitting at a #1 bestseller rank, the dependable Breathe Right name showed up at a modest discount, and there was even an electric neti pot marked down hard enough to make me read the specs twice. Nose clips, chin straps, and a couple of sleep earplugs rounded things out, which gives you a few different angles on the same 2am problem.

So this one leans heavy on nasal strips, with nose clips and chin straps for people who want to try something beyond a sticker, plus a nasal rinse and earplugs for the partner who has simply given up and wants quiet. If you missed our recent roundup of anti snoring devices, those picks pair well with these. You can also browse all deals for more health markdowns.

What are the best nasal strips for snoring right now?

The best nasal strips for snoring open your nostrils from the outside, which helps if your snoring comes from a stuffy or narrow nose rather than your throat. Breathe Right is the name most people reach for, but the high-count strips below cost much less per night.

Breathe Right Nasal Strips

Breathe Right is the strip nearly everyone has seen at the pharmacy, and this is the Extra Strength clear version in a 44-count box. It is drug free and aimed at congestion from colds, allergies, or a deviated septum, which makes it a sensible first try for summer allergy snorers. The discount here is small, but you are paying for a name that has a long track record and a #1 bestseller rank to back it up.

  • 44-count Extra Strength clear strips
  • Drug free congestion relief
  • #1 bestseller rank

Extra Strength Nasal Strips, Lavender

This 60-count box is the better math if you wear a strip every night. The adhesion is rated extra strong and the design is meant to be sweat resistant, so it holds up for workouts as well as sleep. It is a generic brand, but it sits at a #1 bestseller rank and runs half off, and the lavender option is a nice touch if the plain medical look bothers you.

  • 60-count box
  • Strong adhesion, sweat resistant
  • #1 bestseller rank

Extra Strength Nasal Dilator Strips

A 30-count box of extra strength dilator strips in black, marketed for both sleep and exercise breathing. The black color is less obvious in dim light and tends to read as less clinical than beige. Same #1 bestseller rank and half-off price as the others, so pick based on the count and color you prefer.

  • 30-count black strips
  • For sleep and exercise
  • #1 bestseller rank

Nasal Strips, Black and Beige

This 30-count pack mixes black and beige strips, so you can match daytime use to skin tone and keep the black ones for sleep. It is the cheapest entry point of the strips here, which makes it a low-risk way to find out whether strips do anything for your particular snore. The discount is modest, but the sticker price is already low.

  • 30-count mixed colors
  • Anti-snoring and congestion relief
  • Low entry price

Do magnetic nose clips help with snoring?

Magnetic nose clips sit inside the nostrils and gently hold the nasal passages open, which can help some people and do nothing for others depending on where the snore starts. They are cheap and reusable, so they are worth a try if strips and rinses haven’t worked for you.

OHALEEP Adjustable Magnet Nose Clip

The OHALEEP clip uses an adjustable magnet and soft silicone, so you can dial in the pressure instead of being stuck with one fit. It is reusable, which separates it from the disposable strips above, and the clear material keeps it discreet. At this price it is the easiest thing in the post to justify trying, even if you are skeptical.

  • Adjustable magnet
  • Soft clear silicone
  • Reusable

DKMambo Magnetic Nose Clip 8-Pack

DKMambo sells these as an 8-pack of magnetic silicone clips, so you get spares and one to keep in a travel bag. Having several means you are not hunting for the single clip you misplaced on a nightstand. The discount is small, but a multipack at this price is reasonable insurance against losing them.

  • 8 magnetic silicone clips
  • Reusable
  • Travel-friendly multipack

Should you try a chin strap for snoring?

A chin strap is for mouth breathers, the people who snore because their jaw drops open at night. It holds your mouth closed so you breathe through your nose, and it is a different fix than anything that targets the nostrils.

REROIO 4-Side Adjustable Chin Strap

The REROIO strap has a 4-side adjustment, which matters because a strap that slides off in the night does nothing. It is breathable and aimed at adults, and it sits at a strong #6 bestseller rank in its corner of the category. If you wake up with a dry mouth and a sore throat, this is the kind of thing to try before anything fancier.

  • 4-side adjustment
  • Breathable and durable
  • #6 bestseller rank

CFORNOS Universal Chin Strap

CFORNOS makes a simpler universal strap that is adjustable and marketed for men and women alike. It is the more basic option next to the REROIO, with fewer adjustment points, but the discount and price are easy to stomach. A fine pick if you just want to test whether keeping your mouth shut quiets things down.

  • Adjustable universal fit
  • For men and women
  • Simple basic design

What other snoring remedies are worth a look?

If strips and clips are not enough, a saline rinse clears the congestion behind a lot of snoring, and good earplugs at least protect the person who isn’t the one snoring. Here are three that caught my eye.

Benhip Electric Neti Pot

This is the surprise of the week. The Benhip electric neti pot is a cordless, foldable nasal rinse machine that comes with 60 saline packets, and it tackles the congestion that strips only work around. At 71% off it is the deepest discount in the post, though I’d note the original price looks inflated, so judge it on the sale price alone. For chronic stuffiness, a powered rinse does more than any sticker can.

  • Cordless foldable rinse
  • 60 saline packets included
  • 71% off this week

TOAPEX 50dB Sleep Earplugs

If you are the partner, not the snorer, these TOAPEX earplugs are the practical answer. They are rated at 50dB reduction, come with seven eartip sizes and a case, and sit at a #49 bestseller rank. The soft reusable silicone is built for side sleepers, which is exactly who struggles most with plugs that stick out.

  • 50dB noise reduction
  • 7 eartip sizes plus case
  • Side sleeper friendly

Exopine 45dB Sleep Earplugs

The Exopine plugs offer a slightly lower 45dB rating with eight tips and a case, which is the right call if full 50dB blocking feels too isolating and you still want to hear an alarm. They are reusable and aimed at sleep, travel, and concerts, so they earn their spot in a bag. A solid backup to the TOAPEX pair if you want to compare seal and comfort.

  • 45dB noise reduction
  • 8 tips plus case
  • Reusable silicone

Frequently asked questions

Do nasal strips actually stop snoring?

Nasal strips help when your snoring comes from a blocked or narrow nose, since they pull the nostrils open from the outside. They do little for snoring that starts in the throat or soft palate. Many people use them alongside a saline rinse for congestion.

Are nasal strips or nose clips better for snoring?

Strips are disposable and sit on the outside of your nose, while clips are reusable and sit inside the nostrils. Strips tend to be more comfortable for most people, but clips save money over time. They cost little enough that trying both to see which works is reasonable.

What is a chin strap for and who should use one?

A chin strap holds your mouth closed so you breathe through your nose at night. It is meant for mouth breathers who wake up with a dry mouth or sore throat. It will not help if your snoring happens with your mouth already closed.

Does a neti pot help with snoring?

A saline rinse clears mucus and irritants from your nasal passages, which reduces the congestion behind a lot of snoring. An electric model like the Benhip does the work for you and is easier to use consistently. It pairs well with strips for stubborn stuffiness.

Are these prices current?

Prices were verified June 15, 2026, and we refresh this guide weekly. Amazon pricing can shift through the day, so the deal cards show the live number. Check the card before you buy.

Discounts this week ran a wide spread, from about 13% on the budget strips up to 71% on the Benhip electric neti pot. The honest read is that the nasal strips clustered around an even half off, which is a genuine and consistent cut rather than the kind of inflated-original-price stunt I usually flag. The neti pot’s 71% looks great until you notice the original price doing some heavy lifting, so I’d treat its sale price as the real number and ignore the strikethrough.

This was a decent week, not a blockbuster one. The standout for value is the 60-count extra strength strips at half off, because the cost per night is low and the bestseller rank says people keep buying them. The Breathe Right box is the standout for trust, even with the smallest discount, and it is what I’d hand someone who has never tried strips and wants the name they recognize. I’d skip stacking up on the cheapest 30-count pack unless you already know strips work for you.

Heading into summer, expect more sleep and cooling gear to go on sale as the heat sets in and people fight to stay asleep. Nasal strips rarely move much below this half-off mark, so if a snore is keeping the house up, there’s no real reason to wait on the 60-count box. The earplugs and chin straps are the kind of thing that drifts in and out of these small discounts, so grab them when the price is right and don’t lose sleep over a few dollars.