Calore Cooling Pillow
Calore Relief Cooling Pillow
The cooling pillow engineered for perimenopause.
Standard memory foam traps heat. The Calore gel network moves it — continuously, all night, without electricity or a freezer. The difference shows up the first night.
How It Works
Gel infused throughout the foam — not just on the surface — conducts heat away from your face and neck the moment you lie down. Unlike conventional gel pillows that absorb heat and go warm within minutes, the Calore network disperses it continuously. No equilibrium ceiling. No warm-up point. As long as your body produces heat, the pathway stays open.
What's Inside
Continuous-Conduction Gel Foam — Moves heat away from skin rather than absorbing it. Stays responsive through multiple night-sweat episodes, not just the first few minutes.
Pressure-Relieving Support — Conforms to your neck and head. Works for side, back, and combination sleepers.
Dimensions — 38 × 70cm (15" × 27.5"). Designed to sit inside your existing pillowcase.
In the Box: Calore Cooling Pillow insert
60-Night Sleep Trial
Sleep on it for 60 nights. If your night sweats are unchanged — if you're still waking at 3am, still flipping, still lying there waiting for the alarm — return it for a full refund. No forms, no calls, no restocking fee, no explanation needed.
Technical Dossier
01 / Thermal Mechanism
Standard memory foam is an insulator. It absorbs and holds heat at the contact surface — pressed back against your face with nowhere to go. The Calore gel network is a conductor. It moves heat away from your skin continuously and disperses it through the foam mass, keeping the contact surface cooler for longer than any standard pillow can.
02 / Perimenopause Specific
A hot sleeper runs warm at a consistent elevated baseline. A woman in perimenopause experiences vasomotor events — sudden, acute heat surges hitting hardest between 2am and 4am. Different physics problem. Different engineering requirement. Every competing cooling pillow is built for the first problem. This one is built for the second.
03 / The 3:29am Problem
Per a 2024 survey of over 2,000 perimenopausal women, the average wake-up time from night sweats is 3:29am. 69% reported that broken sleep was directly harming their emotional wellbeing — not just energy levels. Their relationships. Their sense of self. The problem isn't only the hot flash. It's the pillow that traps the heat afterward and extends the wake window.
04 / The Cold Side Myth
The cold side of any pillow is just the side that hasn't absorbed your heat yet. Standard foam reaches thermal equilibrium in minutes — the heat has nowhere to go, so it builds at the surface. Continuous conduction works differently. The pathway stays open as long as your body produces heat. There is no equilibrium ceiling to hit.