Night shifts shouldn’t follow you home.
Blocks ward noise and partner snoring so you actually sleep before your next shift.
Blocks ward noise and partner snoring so you actually sleep before your next shift.
★★★★★ 4.7 · Trusted by 3,494 nurses worldwide
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😴 Block daytime noise after night shift
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1x Set of Bollsen Life+ Earplugs

1x Carrying Case

User manual
Free shipping and a 40 day risk free trial of our earplugs.
Free shipping with DHL within 1 to 3 business days. If you are not completely satisfied, simply contact us within 40 days of purchase for a full refund. No questions asked, you will receive a free return label. For more details, please visit our Shipping & Delivery Terms page Our warehouses are located:

Because exhausted and sleepy aren’t the same thing – and your body knows the difference.
Your circadian rhythm is driven by light, not tiredness. When you come off nights and try to sleep at 9am, your brain is receiving daylight signals that say stay awake and alert, regardless of how many hours you’ve been on your feet. You’re not failing to sleep. You’re fighting a biological system that was never designed for rotating shift patterns.
There’s a second layer: the post-night shift state that nurses describe as “wired but exhausted.” Cortisol – the stress hormone that peaks to keep you alert through the small hours – doesn’t drop the moment your shift ends. It lingers. You lie there thinking about the patients, the handover, the noise next door, the lorry reversing outside – and your brain won’t switch off no matter how badly your body needs it to.
UK research on NHS nurses found that 86% of night shift nurses sleep 6 hours or less between shifts, with a median of just 5 hours. Sleep quality, not just quantity, is the problem: the brain stays partially alert, scanning for threats in an unfamiliar daytime sound environment. Blocking out that environment is the single most effective intervention most shift workers haven’t tried.
Yes – and this is the question almost every nurse asks first.
Earplugs attenuate sound. They don’t create silence. A phone alarm, especially placed on the pillow or directly on the bedside table, will still wake you. High-frequency tones – the kind most alarms use – penetrate earplugs far more effectively than the low rumble of traffic, voices, or a neighbour’s TV. Sound also travels through bone conduction, which no earplug blocks.
Practical solution: place your phone 30cm from your head, not across the room. If you’re a very deep sleeper – or if the sleep deprivation has built up enough that you’re worried – pair it with a vibrating wristband alarm. That combination is what many shift-working nurses on nursing forums settle on.
What bollsen earplugs don’t do: they don’t block an alarm set to adequate volume at close range. What they do: they block the bin lorry at 10am, the conversation outside your window, the child playing in the street, and the thousand other things that are preventing you from reaching the deep sleep that actually restores you.
This is the objection that keeps nurse-parents awake even when the rest of the house is quiet.
Here’s what the research shows: earplugs reduce the continuous background noise – traffic, the neighbour’s lawnmower, a TV downstairs – while leaving sharp, sudden, high-priority sounds still detectable. A child crying is high-frequency and high-intensity. It is not what earplugs block. What they block is the grinding ambient sound that keeps your brain on alert and prevents you from ever reaching deep sleep in the first place.
Loop Earplugs market research confirms that parents consistently report remaining able to hear baby cries and children’s calls through their products. The physics supports this: an infant’s cry peaks at 90+ dB. Standard earplugs attenuate ambient noise by 25–30 dB. The signal still gets through; the background doesn’t.
There’s also a second-order argument. UK research on NHS nurses found that those with children aged four and under had more than double the risk of excessive daytime sleepiness – this group sleeps worst and yet feels the most guilt about protecting their sleep. But a parent operating on 4 broken hours of day sleep is not more available. She is less available, and for longer.
The point is that foam earplugs are not earplugs as a category – they’re one poorly designed implementation of them.
Standard foam plugs are designed for single-use industrial noise protection: crammed in tight, creating a rigid seal. In bed, on your side, with your ear pressed into a pillow, that seal becomes a pressure point. After 60–90 minutes it builds into what forum users describe as an “ear headache.” You wake up to take them out. The noise wakes you up again. You’ve added insomnia to the original problem.
bollsen Life+ earplugs are medical-grade silicone, sized to your ear canal using AR KI TECH. They seal without pressure. They sit flush rather than protruding. Side sleepers – which is most people – find the difference significant: there’s no hard foam cylinder to press against the pillow. The comparison: foam is a shoe crammed onto the wrong foot. A properly fitted silicone earplug is one you stop noticing after five minutes.
For nurses used to wearing foam plugs in clinical settings and writing off earplugs as uncomfortable, the category hasn’t failed you. The product has. These are not the same thing.
It is, and the evidence is specific and serious – which is why you need to hear it honestly.
A 12-hour night shift is associated with nearly triple the risk of making a clinical error compared to a standard day shift. By the 4th consecutive night shift, accident risk is 36% higher than on the first. A UK clinical audit found that 100% of surveyed NHS staff experienced fatigue symptoms including concentration difficulties, delayed responses, and forgetfulness.
The alcohol comparison is regularly cited by NHS Employers: post-night shift fatigue produces cognitive and motor impairment comparable to driving at the legal alcohol limit. You wouldn’t go into clinical practice at that level voluntarily. But the system asks it of you routinely.
A real chemotherapy case from the 2025 HSSIB investigation: two NHS staff checking an infusion were eight hours and 40 minutes into a 12.5-hour night shift, having slept only 5–6 hours between shifts. An incorrect infusion was given to a young patient. The trust concluded fatigue “likely influenced” the event.
The fear that poor sleep will cause a mistake is not anxiety. It is an accurate clinical assessment of the risk. The response to that fear is not to lie awake catastrophising – it’s to do everything possible to protect the sleep you have.
It’s extremely common among night shift nurses. “Wired but exhausted” is the phrase that comes up again and again in nursing forums and in qualitative research – the inability to wind down even when your body is at its limit.
The mechanism: cortisol peaks between 2am and 4am to keep you alert through the biological low point of the night. At the end of a night shift, that cortisol hasn’t yet cleared. You leave the ward running on stress hormones and adrenaline, and your brain doesn’t switch off just because the shift card has been handed over.
Nurses.co.uk describes the post-nights pattern accurately: the temptation to do a big food shop, have a coffee, run errands, watch something – anything – before the eventual crash. The result is sleeping at 2pm and waking at 6pm, having used half the recovery window before sleep was even possible.
Earplugs address a specific part of this: once you are asleep, they keep you asleep. Day sleep is repeatedly interrupted by external noise – the peak delivery hour, builders, children, traffic – at exactly the point when the body needs uninterrupted deep sleep cycles. Removing that noise doesn’t solve the wind-down problem. It solves the staying asleep problem. And for most nurses, the second is as damaging as the first.
Yes, and the research is specific to shift workers – not generalised population data.
Studies confirm elevated risk of cardiometabolic disease, glucose intolerance, immune vulnerability, hypertension, and breast cancer risk in long-term shift workers. Obesity affects one in three night shift workers, driven by disrupted cortisol and chaotic eating patterns. These aren’t abstract statistics. They’re the trajectory of a career spent working against the body’s fundamental rhythms without adequate protection.
There’s a closer-term consequence that nursing forums document more directly: shift work disorder leading to burnout. A peer-reviewed study found that shift work disorder – the formal clinical diagnosis for the sleep disruption you’re describing – accounted for 36.5% of burnout variance in nurses. Not job stress. Not workload. The sleep disorder itself.
The chain is well-documented: disrupted day sleep → shift work disorder → mental health deterioration → burnout → intention to leave → leaving. Between 2021 and 2024, nurses leaving within five years of registering rose 67%. Sleep deprivation was identified in qualitative research as directly heightening “anxiety about professional competence and led some nurses to consider leaving the nursing profession.”
You cannot fix a rota. You cannot force your cortisol to cooperate with a set of nights. But you can control what reaches your ears during the hours when sleep is possible.
Each bollsen Life+ set includes your earplugs in medical-grade silicone, sized precisely to your ear canal via AR KI TECH, with a compact carry case and a Fit Guide with insertion tips. Free UK delivery. Returns and exchanges are free if the fit isn’t right – though with AR KI TECH sizing our return rate sits at around 3%, so it rarely comes to that.
Reclaim real sleep after your shift with BOLLSEN Life+ earplugs for nurses and night shifts.
They reduce the daytime noise that keeps you half awake, voices, traffic, neighbors, doors, construction, and household chaos.
Feather light, low profile silicone design helps prevent pressure pain, comfortable for long wear and side sleeping.
Bonus, the Life+ 10x pack is your shift survival insurance. Keep pairs in your work bag, locker, bedside table, and as backups for those days when you cannot afford bad sleep.
Safety note: Do not use earplugs in situations where you must hear critical alarms, safety instructions, or patient needs.

After over 1700 tests, independent laboratories in Germany have confirmed: Life+ reduces noise by an average of 24 dB.
For nurses and night shift workers, that proven reduction helps turn daytime chaos into real recovery, so you wake up steadier, not wired, stressed, or exhausted.
Life+ earplugs reduce the sounds that ruin your post shift sleep:
With drastically lower noise exposure, your body can drop into deeper sleep faster and stay asleep longer, so back to back nights feel more manageable.
For best results, insert the earplugs correctly so they seal comfortably without pressure, even when sleeping on your side.
Whether you work permanent nights or rotating shifts, Life+ helps you clock out mentally and protect your recovery time.
Safety note: Use for sleep and recovery. Do not use earplugs in situations where you must hear patient needs, critical alarms, or safety instructions.


Made from premium medical grade silicone, Life+ earplugs deliver soft comfort through long daytime sleep after night shift.
The innovative two lamella design follows your ear canal’s natural contours, creating a secure seal with a low pressure feel.
Once inserted, they sit ultra low profile, so you can wear them continuously for hours without aching, throbbing, or constant readjusting.
Many earplugs feel bulky, pop out when you move, or dig into your ear when you sleep on your side.
That is exactly why we engineered Life+.
The ultra low profile design stays secure when you roll over, press into the pillow, or change positions, so your sleep does not get interrupted by fit issues.
A discreet removal tab lets you take them out fast when you need to talk, take a call, or get up quickly.
Life+ is designed to reduce overall noise, so the background fades and your body can drop into deeper sleep faster.
It helps cut down voices, traffic, doors, footsteps, and those random noise spikes that wake you up right when you finally fall asleep.
If you are worried about oversleeping, set a reliable wake up system, for example a vibrating alarm or smartwatch vibration plus a backup alarm, and test it once on a day off.
Shift recovery insurance in earplug form, protect your sleep window, recover properly, and show up for the next shift feeling more steady.
Safety note: Use for sleep and recovery. Do not use earplugs in clinical situations where you must hear patient needs, critical alarms, or safety instructions.
Absolutely. Life+ is built for people who need real recovery and focus in loud, unpredictable environments, which is exactly what night shift life feels like. Use them for post shift sleep, daytime naps, and any moment you need the world turned down without feeling completely disconnected.
Many nurses and night shift workers keep Life+ in constant rotation: sleeping during the day in noisy apartments, blocking roommates and family noise, taking the edge off overstimulation while charting off the floor, resting in break rooms, commuting, and protecting their ears at concerts or events on days off.
Whether you are coming off three nights in a row or just trying to get a solid nap before your next shift, Life+ helps turn chaos into a calmer, more manageable baseline.
Safety note: Use for sleep and recovery. Do not use earplugs in clinical situations where you must hear patient needs, critical alarms, or safety instructions.
We want you to feel completely satisfied with your purchase. That is why we offer a satisfaction guarantee: if you’re not happy with the comfort or performance of your Life+ earplugs, you can return them within 40 days for a full refund, no questions asked.
Life+ earplugs are made for daily use. The durable silicone material keeps its shape and comfort even after many uses of wear, providing reliable noise reduction over time.
With normal use, one pair lasts around three to four months before replacement is recommended. A Multi-Pack can keep you supplied for up to a year of comfortable, quiet nights.
Keeping your Life+ earplugs clean is simple. Wipe them with a soft cloth and, if needed, use a small amount of mild dish soap to remove residue.
Are you travelling a lot? Then simply store the earplugs in the included aluminum case in your pocket or your keychain.
At BOLLSEN, sustainability is built into every detail of our products.
Custom-fit hearing protection can often be expensive. BOLLSEN Life+ earplugs offer a smart alternative with a conical, two-lamella design that comfortably adapts to the shape of your ears. The soft, medical-grade silicone ensures a secure fit that feels tailored, without the complexity or cost of custom solutions.
Our standard version is designed for medium-sized ear canals. This version provides a comfortable fit for the majority of users.
Are your ears particularly large or small? For ears that are smaller or larger than average, our AR KI Tech system can help determine your ideal size. Simply send us photos of your ears, and our technology recommends the most suitable earplugs for your individual fit. This ensures optimal comfort and effective noise reduction.
I work nights at a hosipital centre and sleeping during the day had always been a battle I was quietly losing. Kids outside, bin collections, deliveries it didn't matter how tired I was, something would pull me out of sleep after two or three hours. Life+ blocked enough of it that I started getting real sleep again. Five to six solid hours most days now. I go into work feeling like a person rather than someone who's been slightly awake for 18 hours.
I'm a junior doctor doing long rotations and the quality of my sleep in between shifts was borderline dangerous . I was living near a main road and averaging maybe five hours of properly broken sleep. A registrar mentioned Life+ almost in passing and I picked some up on a whim. Within three days the difference was significant enough that I texted him to say thanks. I now keep a pair in my white coat pocket and a spare at home.
I travel constantly for work usually 10 or 11 flights a month and ear pressure discomfort during descent had become something I just accepted as part of the job. A colleague mentioned pressure-regulating earplugs and I finally tried them on a transatlantic trip. I made it through completely comfortable and couldn't believe I'd been putting up with that discomfort for years. They're in my hand luggage permanently now.