How To Clear Blocked Ears After Flying [better] Access
Overall Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ (4.5/5 – Highly Effective, but Requires Patience)
October 2023 The Problem: Why "Airplane Ear" Ruins Your Trip Anyone who has flown with a cold, allergies, or even just bad luck knows the misery: you land, the seatbelt sign dings off, but your ears don't. You feel like you're underwater. Your own voice sounds distant and muffled. This is barotrauma or "airplane ear" – a pressure imbalance between your middle ear and the cabin environment. While most cases resolve in a few hours, stubborn blockages can last days, causing pain, dizziness, and hearing loss. how to clear blocked ears after flying
Travel Health & Wellness Desk
Most blocked ears after flying are annoying but harmless. Do not forcibly blow your nose while pinching it shut – that can rupture an eardrum. The single most effective, free, and safe technique is swallowing with your nose pinched (Toynbee maneuver), followed by steam. For the 5% of people whose ears stay blocked for >48 hours, see an ENT – you may have a middle ear effusion that needs professional drainage. Overall Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ (4
4.5/5 because the perfect solution (instant, no risk, no gadget) doesn't exist, but a combination of the above methods will clear 95% of cases. This is barotrauma or "airplane ear" – a

