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For a long flight

Five items between you and a sub-par 11-hour flight. The neck pillow is the one most people get wrong.

Trtl Pillow

around £35

Soft scarf with a hidden internal support — holds your head upright in the same position a chiropractor would, instead of letting your chin fall to your chest.

Why this, not thatThe horseshoe-shaped neck pillows don't support the head properly and look ridiculous. Trtl looks like a scarf and actually works.

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Bose QuietComfort Ultra Earbuds

around £270

Best in-flight noise cancelling on the market in 2026. Turns a long-haul cabin into a podcast booth.

Why this, not thatThe £80 generic ANC buds work for trains, not aeroplanes. Cabin pressure noise needs proper engineering.

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Physix Gear compression socks (20–30 mmHg)

around £20

Reduces ankle swelling, lowers DVT risk on flights over 6 hours. Especially worth it after age 40 or if you have a history of clots.

Why this, not thatThe £4 pharmacy compression socks are too loose to do anything. 20–30 mmHg is the medical threshold.

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Kindle Paperwhite (2024)

around £160

Six weeks of battery, glare-free in sunlight, 16 GB of books in your pocket. The single best in-flight upgrade per pound spent.

Why this, not thatReading on a phone destroys your eyes and your battery. The Kindle is paper-imitation at its best.

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Anker Prime 20,000mAh power bank

around £80

Charges a phone five times, fast-charges a laptop too. Airline-approved for cabin baggage (under 100Wh).

Why this, not thatThe dead phone at the connecting airport is a small disaster. 20,000mAh is the sweet spot between capacity and bag weight.

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