4.9/5 Excellent, from 1,487 caregivers
Skin-Saving Gel Cushion
Guards your parent's tailbone against the bedsores that flat foam and donut rings only make worse, with clinical depth that holds all day.
No Red Marks
Comfortable All Day
Clinical-Grade Depth
Stays In Place
Free US Shipping
Ships Within 24 Hours
60-Day Money-Back Guarantee
What is it?
A clinical-depth gel cushion, 2.4 inches of pressure-redistributing gel that keeps your parent's weight off the tailbone instead of letting the bone press into the chair through paper-thin skin.
Why would my parent need it?
Anyone who sits 6 or more hours a day in a recliner or wheelchair is inside the window where pressure starts breaking skin down. Clinical depth spreads that pressure before a red mark ever becomes a wound.
How fast will we notice a difference?
Most caregivers tell us the constant shifting eases the first afternoon, and the redness that used to show up after 30 minutes stops appearing within the first week.
Is it really risk-free?
Yes. Use it in their chair for 60 days. If their skin isn't calmer and you aren't worrying less, send it back for a full refund. You only pay if it actually protects them.
Real Caregivers. Real Results.
Raw, Unedited Reviews
4 Signs It's Not Just Old Age
If your parent sits all day, these are the first signs their skin is breaking down, not just getting older.
The Pink Spot You're Ignoring
Can Be An Open Wound In Days
Once your parent sits in one spot for more than 2 to 3 hours, the pressure on the tailbone shuts off the blood flow to the skin and the tissue starts to die from the inside out. She won't tell you it hurts, because she doesn't want to be a burden. So the only warning you get is what that trapped pressure does next:
Cuts Off The Blood
Sustained pressure squeezes the small vessels shut and starves the skin over the bone of oxygen.
Kills Tissue Fast
Tissue death can begin in as little as 2 to 3 hours of unrelieved sitting.
Spreads Underneath First
The wound grows beneath skin that still looks intact, so the open sore you finally see is the last stage, not the first.
Turns Deadly
Left to advance, a pressure sore reaches muscle and bone, and stage 4 wounds carry a mortality rate as high as 60%.
How It Protects Her When You Can't
Two things have to happen to stop a pressure sore. This cushion does both, every hour she sits.
Her First 30 Days Of Real Protection
Every Spec Built To Protect Her Skin
2.4-Inch Clinical Depth
Pressure-Relief Gel
Won't Bottom Out
Breathable Grid
Washable Cover
Non-Slip Base
Why Caregivers Choose It Over Foam And Donuts
Her Skin Will Not Heal Itself
Every afternoon she sits unprotected, the pressure keeps working on that tailbone. You can stop it today with one thing:
Relieve Pressure
Stop Redness
Protect Her Skin
Rest Easy
Frequently Asked Questions
How is this different from the cushions we already tried?
The cushions sold in drugstores are thin foam that flattens in a few weeks, or donut rings that nurses warn against because they cut off blood flow to the tailbone. This is 2.4 inches of clinical-depth gel, the same depth standard used in professional care settings, and it holds that depth all day instead of letting the bone press through.
My parent already has a red mark. Can this still help?
A stage 1 red mark that hasn't broken the skin can reverse in a few days once the pressure comes off it, so getting clinical depth under your parent now is exactly what that early mark needs. If the skin is already open, keep the pressure off it and have a nurse look at it.
Will it work in both a recliner and a wheelchair?
Yes. The non-slip base holds it on any seat, and most families keep one cushion and move it between the wheelchair during the day and the recliner at night.
My dad is a larger man. Will it flatten under him?
No. The gel grid holds its shape under any bodyweight and won't bottom out, which is the exact failure thin foam and cheap gel have under a heavier parent.
Is it safe if she's incontinent or sits in moisture?
Yes, and it's built for it. The open grid lets air move underneath to keep the skin dry, and the cover lifts off and goes straight in the machine.
Won't a donut cushion do the same thing?
No. A donut ring pushes the weight into the rim around the tailbone, which chokes off the blood supply and is more likely to cause a sore than prevent one. Pressure has to be spread out across a clinical-depth surface, not concentrated around a hole.
How long until the redness stops?
Most caregivers tell us the redness that used to appear within 30 minutes of sitting stops showing up within the first week of using it every day.
Doesn't Medicare cover a real pressure-relief cushion?
Only after your parent already has an advanced wound, which is the cruel catch every caregiver hits: you have to have the sore to qualify for the thing that prevents the sore. You don't have to wait for that. You can put clinical depth under them today for a tiny fraction of what treating one sore costs.
What if it doesn't work for us?
Send it back inside 60 days for a full refund. You only keep it if it actually protects your parent's skin.