Comparisons
Nasal Strips vs Mouth Tape: Which Do You Need? (Or Both?)
Nasal strips and mouth tape solve different problems. Here's how to tell which one you need — and why most serious sleepers end up using both together.

The short answer
Nasal strips open the airway from the outside; mouth tape keeps the mouth gently closed so you breathe through it. They solve different problems and the best results come from using both. Use a strip if your airway is narrow, tape if your jaw drops open at night, and both if you want full nose-only breathing.
What each one actually does
Nasal strips sit across the bridge of the nose. A spring band lifts the soft cartilage outward, widening the external nasal valve — the narrowest point in your airway. Effect: lower nasal resistance, easier inhale through the nose.
Mouth tape sits across the lips. A gentle hypoallergenic strip holds the mouth closed at night, so you breathe through your nose by default. Effect: no mouth-breathing, no dry throat, less snoring from the soft palate.
Which problem do you have?
- If your nose feels narrow or congested → nasal strip.
- If you wake up with a dry mouth → mouth tape.
- If your snoring is high-pitched and whistly → nasal strip.
- If your snoring happens with your mouth wide open → mouth tape.
- If your partner says both — both.
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ShopWhy most serious sleepers use both
Tape without an open airway is uncomfortable — you'll feel like you can't breathe. Strip without tape works only if you don't open your mouth at night, which most people do once they hit deeper sleep.
Stacking the two delivers full nose-only breathing: the strip gives you the airway, the tape keeps you using it. This is the configuration most athletes, snorers and serious sleep-optimisers settle on.
Order of operations if you're new
- Week 1: nasal strip only. Confirm your nose can do the work all night.
- Week 2: add mouth tape. Start with a small vertical strip across the lip seal, not the full mouth.
- Week 3: graduate to a full strip if comfortable.
Don't tape if
- You have a cold or chronic blocked nose.
- You have untreated sleep apnoea.
- You drink alcohol before bed.
- You're sick to the point of vomiting risk.
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RhinoGear is Australian-owned, TGA-listed (ARTG 508285), drug-free and dispatched within 1 business day from Australia.
Frequently asked questions
About this article
Written by the RhinoGear Editorial Team — sleep, breathing and recovery writers based in Australia. Every article is fact-checked against Australian therapeutic-goods guidance and current peer-reviewed literature on nasal breathing and sleep. RhinoGear products referenced are TGA-listed (ARTG 508285), drug-free and latex-free.
Published 14 May 2026 · Last updated 15 May 2026. This article is for general information only and is not medical advice. If you suspect sleep apnea or another medical condition, see your GP.
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