
By Sarah Thompson
Last Updated November 4, 2025
Summary: I thought comfortable flights meant $3,000 upgrades. Then a woman next to me showed me her Cushy Bum on a 13-hour flight, she was relaxed while I suffered. I ordered one immediately. Now I get first-class pressure relief for under $99. Here's how it works.

Airlines deliberately stripped economy seats from 4.2 inches of padding down to 1.7 inches over twenty years. Not for weight savings, for upgrade revenue.
The thinner you sit, the more you'll pay to escape. This adds back those missing layers with air cells that won't compress flat like foam does.

You know that destroyed feeling after landing? Lower back screaming, tailbone numb, needing a day to recover? That's not normal aging. That's engineered discomfort.
With proper pressure distribution across your entire seat area, you'll walk off the plane feeling fine. Not "okay for someone our age" fine. Actually fine.

Traditional seats create concentrated pressure on your sit bones and tailbone. That's why you're constantly shifting, getting numb, feeling pain.
Air cells distribute your weight evenly across the entire surface, eliminating those painful hot spots entirely. No concentrated pressure means no pain points. It's physics, and it actually works.

University studies prove foam cushions compress your blood vessels the longer you sit, reducing circulation. Air cells do the opposite. They maintain vessel openings, improving blood flow by 150% over time.
That's why foam leaves you numb and tingly. Air keeps everything flowing. It's measurable, published science.

Press the side valves to inflate for firmer support or deflate for softer cushioning while sitting on it. Customize pressure exactly where you need it.
Firm for lower back support, soft for tailbone relief. Your comfort, your control, your perfect setting. Every time.

Deflates completely flat in ten seconds. Rolls into the included bag smaller than a water bottle. Clips to your luggage exterior or tucks into any carry-on corner.
Weighs less than your tablet. That's why you'll actually bring it. Unlike those bulky foam blocks that stay home because they're too annoying to pack.

First-class upgrades cost $3,000 per flight. This costs under $100 once and works forever. Same pressure relief, 97% cheaper. One flight and it already pays for itself.




