Titan Recovery has opened pre-orders for a second product: TitanAir™ Nasal Strips. If you've followed this site, you know I use their bamboo silk mouth tape nightly and rate it as the best in the category. A nasal strip from the same company is the logical companion — strips open the nasal airway, tape keeps you using it.
Here's an honest first look: what Titan actually states about the product, what's still unknown, and who should care.
Important framing up front: TitanAir is currently pre-order. The product page's call-to-action is "Pre-Order Now," which means it isn't shipping yet. Nobody — including me — has long-term tested these. This is a launch announcement and a look at the stated specs, not a review. I'll write a real review once I've slept on them for 30 nights.
What Titan states about TitanAir
Straight from the product page, without embellishment:
- "Engineered for all-night comfort"
- "Skin safe adhesive — beard-friendly, zero residue"
- "Promotes nasal breathing for deeper sleep cycles"
- "Hypoallergenic, medical-grade materials"
- Third-party lab-tested and PFAS-free
- Free US shipping, and a Subscribe & Save option (10%)
- Backed by Titan's Better Sleep Guarantee
That's the full stated spec sheet. Notably not stated on the page: strip counts per pack, physical sizes, or the specific substrate material beyond "hypoallergenic medical-grade." I'm not going to guess at those.
The pricing
TitanAir uses the same tiered structure as the mouth tape:
| Supply | Price | Per night |
|---|---|---|
| 30 day | $24.95 | $0.83 |
| 90 day (save 25%) | $55.95 | $0.62 |
| 180 day (save 30%) | $104.95 | $0.58 |
| 360 day (save 35%) | $194.95 | $0.54 |
For context, drugstore nasal strips (Breathe Right and similar) run roughly $0.30-0.50 per strip, so TitanAir sits at a modest premium — in line with the positioning of the mouth tape.
Why a Titan strip is interesting
The reason I'm paying attention isn't the strip in isolation — plenty of nasal strips exist. It's the pairing.
Here's the problem the combination solves. Nasal strips open the nasal airway. Mouth tape keeps you breathing through it. Neither works well alone for the very common person who has both some nasal congestion and a tendency to mouth-breathe:
- A strip alone opens your nose but doesn't stop your jaw falling open at 3 AM
- Tape alone keeps your mouth closed but is miserable if you can't breathe through your nose
Strip first, tape second is the sequence that actually converts a congested mouth-breather into a comfortable nasal breather. (Full explanation of why they're complementary.) Having both from one maker, designed to work together, is a genuine convenience — and the shared "beard-friendly, zero residue" adhesive philosophy suggests they've thought about the same failure modes on both products.
What I want to know before I recommend it
Honest gaps I'll be testing for once these ship:
- Does it hold all night? The failure mode for cheap strips is peeling by hour 4-5. Titan's mouth tape adhesive genuinely stays put for 8 hours; if TitanAir's does the same, that's the differentiator.
- How much does it actually open the airway? Strips vary a lot in spring tension. Too weak and it does nothing; too strong and it's uncomfortable.
- Does the "zero residue" claim hold? Drugstore strips often leave adhesive on the nose bridge.
- How does it handle sweat and side-sleeping? The bridge of the nose is a tough adhesive location.
- The specific lab testing. The page says third-party lab-tested and PFAS-free. Titan publishes detailed lab reports for the mouth tape at their lab-tested page; I'd like to see equivalent specificity for the strips.
Who should care
Pre-order if: you already use Titan's mouth tape and get congested at night, and you want the matched pair. That's the clearest use case.
Wait if: you want a proven long-term track record. It's a new product with no independent testing yet. A drugstore strip works fine in the meantime, and I'd rather you buy something proven than something unproven on my say-so.
Skip if: your nose is already clear and you don't get congested — you don't need a strip at all, just the tape. Most people who mouth-breathe with a clear nasal airway need only the tape.
The bottom line
TitanAir™ Nasal Strips is a sensible product from a company whose mouth tape I already trust, priced in line with their existing line, currently available for pre-order. The stated specs — all-night comfort, beard-friendly zero-residue adhesive, hypoallergenic medical-grade materials, third-party lab-tested and PFAS-free — read like the mouth tape's design philosophy applied to a strip.
But it's a pre-order, and I haven't tested it. I'm interested, not endorsing. If you're already in the Titan ecosystem and get stuffy at night, it's a reasonable pre-order. If you want proof first, wait for the reviews — including mine.
For the products I have tested, see the 12-brand mouth tape comparison and the nasal strip roundup.