Puddles—December 6, 2025
I’ve used Naväge for years, and it’s hands down the best sinus rinse system I’ve ever tried. Nothing else even comes close—not even NasalFresh MD. The power, the ease, the clean design, the way it actually clears you out without making a mess—Naväge just works. I travel constantly for work, so my sinuses are always fighting hotel air, flights, and climate shifts. Naväge is the one thing that keeps me breathing like a normal person instead of someone who just crawled out of a dust storm. It’s easy to pack, simple to use, and consistently reliable. After trying other options (yes, even NasalFresh MD) I appreciate Naväge even more. It’s sturdy, well made, and feels like a real medical-grade device, not a toy. The suction power alone puts others to shame. If you’re on the fence, take the leap. This is the product I recommend to everyone I know because it’s the one that actually does what it promises. Naväge is worth every penny. Read more
Tomato—November 14, 2025
I love using my Navage. It took me awhile to justify the initial expense but my neti pot wasn’t doing the trick. I purchased my first Navage two years ago and used it daily. It was recommended by my naturopathic doctor and really helped with a past mold infection I was trying to heal from. My doc thought mold was colonizing in my sinuses, hence why I couldn’t eradicate it. The Navage stopped working and I opened it up to replace the batteries. It looked like some water got in. After cleaning it up and replacing the batteries, the first one stopped working after several more uses. When I reopened it, water got in. I was really careful when closing it back up tightly and cleaning it - I even purchased eye glass screws. Overall, for the price and how much it has helped me, I can justify the purchases. I now use it when I am fighting a cold, have allergies or think I have been in contact with mold. Read more
SP—August 9, 2025
Really, worth 4.5 stars. It's easy to use, very effective, disassembles for easy drying. I would note a few things: 1) Unlike Neti pot, your head is erect, so to have the saline solution reach your upper sinuses, just stop while some solution is in your sinus cavities, pinch your nose, lie down, and tilt your head back. This also helps your eustation tubes. Finish by blowing your nose. 2) Buy the extra cleaning kit that has the u-bend that you put in place of the nose pillows for cleaning and add water to the container. You need to use an altered empty saline pod so that you can depress the button. Add DI water, press the button to rinse the salt out and clean it. Then let it dry. This prevents you from wetting the bottom of the motor/battery chamber when cleaning. I killed a previous Navage by rinsing it and getting the electronic components wet after breaking the seal to change the batteries. Read more
Clovis Dale—July 13, 2024
After recovering from sinus surgery, my doctor prescribed something to combine along with a nasal irrigator, which, let's face it, is an unpleasant process no matter how delicately one tries, so the promise of a machine that makes it not only tidy, but as simple as a single button? Things that are too good to be true are, and if I'm lying may my nose grow. But no, my nose is what it is, and that's one (of many) issues with this device. From a merely anatomical perspective, the makers of the device assume everyone has the same nose. Why else would they not include any additional nose tips? Why would they not at least make them adjustable? These are too big, too far apart, too rigid, and not angled enough. I could tilt my whole head to kind of get it to work, but the top of the unit is not watertight, so the precious (and expensive) pod-anointed water just spills everywhere. The suction does work, but only from specific angles. The jet of anointed-water works, but again only from specific angles. Sadly the geometry of these two angles do not align, so either one side either sucks, or one side blows. There's never a smooth and uniform circulation, flow, never a lazy-river nor white-water-rapids, it was just squirt-squirt, glug-glug. With the rest on myself, or the counter, or a passing cat who should know better than to poke its nose into such things. Speaking of pokes, the lets-make-life-easy-by-making-one-button design promised easy of use, but in practicality, its so weirdly placed, not right enough but not wrong enough, that it just feels awkward in the hand and awkward to press, which in itself requires more effort than expected, and to maintain said pressure, at said odd angle, whilst holding ones head at an even odder angle, while spilling oddly anointed fluid over anything and everything that isn't a sinus, which is the one thing I was oddly aiming for. The entire device feels over-engineered. It has lots of plasticky bits. Little bits and bobs. Nose greebles. It looks cool, very sci-fi, but it also feels like there's so much that can go wrong when something as simple as a nose-vacuum needs so many parts, parts that rattle, jiggle, add unnecessary weight, and probably add unnecessary cost, parts that probably exist solely to lock you into some exclusive nose-keurig pods, for the device will do utterly nothing without that magic pod, that giver of salty liquid. And with something as inherently gross as nose-stuffings, the entire process for sanitizing the thing feels like a brutal chore. It would be nice if the device could be broken down, the parts cleaned individually, dishwashered, microwaved, steamed, exposed-to-full-moon, whatever it takes, but currently the whole thing is under lock and plastic-key, so the best you can do is run vinegar and soap through it which will absolutely most-certainly never come back to haunt you the very next time you try to use it. I began this quest because the off-the-shelf drugstore squeeze-bottle nasal-irrigator seemed cheap, low-tech, and simplistic. Now that I've seen this nose-emperor has no clothes, the squeeze bottle seems like a sudden king. Read more