Comparison — Updated May 2026
Both are ENT-recommended nasal irrigation systems. Both work. But they're different products for different people. Here's the full breakdown.
Navage wins for...
NeilMed wins for...
| Factor | Navage | NeilMed | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Motorized suction+push | Manual squeeze bottle | Navage |
| Upfront cost | ~$99 | ~$15–25 | NeilMed |
| Per-rinse cost | ~$0.43–0.57 (pods) | ~$0.10 (salt packets) | NeilMed |
| Ease of use | Easy — button press | Moderate — squeeze pressure | Navage |
| Severe congestion | Works (active suction) | Sometimes (manual pressure) | Navage |
| Mess | Low (sealed chamber) | Moderate (drains on sink) | Navage |
| Saline customization | None (fixed pods) | Full (mix your own) | NeilMed |
| Time per session | ~3 minutes | ~5–7 minutes | Navage |
| Power source | 2 × AA batteries | None needed | NeilMed |
| ENT recommendation | Widely recommended | Standard clinical choice | Tie |
If cost is your primary driver — NeilMed. A NeilMed starter kit costs ~$20 and each rinse costs about a dime. A full year of daily rinsing with NeilMed: ~$35. A full year with Navage (60-count S&S): ~$180–200. That's a real difference.
But if you've had sinus congestion severe enough that squeeze bottle rinsing didn't work — or you simply want a faster, cleaner daily routine — Navage is the clear winner. The powered suction reaches where manual squeeze pressure doesn't.
Many serious sinus sufferers own both: NeilMed for maintenance and Navage for symptomatic days when congestion is severe. That's a perfectly sensible setup.
Comes with 20 SaltPods — enough to know if the powered rinse works for your congestion level.
See Navage on Amazon →Full Starter Bundle review · SaltPods guide · Navage vs Neti Pot