Buyer's Guide

Weighted Blankets, Lap Pads, Compression Vests, Body Socks:
Which Does My Child Need?

Deep pressure can be transformative for sensory children — but the five main tools work differently and suit different moments. Here's how to choose.

✍️ Written by Sarah M. 🗓️ June 2026 ⏱️ 8 min read
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I'm a parent, not an occupational therapist. Jude has ADHD and is a sensory seeker; we've used all five of the tools on this page at various points. This guide draws on that experience and on published OT guidance. If your child has complex sensory needs, a paediatric OT can assess which tools and weights are right for your specific child.

When Jude's OT first mentioned deep pressure, I thought she meant one thing: a weighted blanket. I didn't realise that "deep pressure" is a whole category of tools, each designed for a different context, a different body part, and a different type of child. It took me an embarrassingly long time to understand why the blanket that worked brilliantly at bedtime wasn't really the right choice for school, and why the compression vest that helped during the day wasn't the right thing for the car.

All five of these tools work on the same underlying principle: proprioceptive input. The body's nervous system uses deep pressure signals to build a clearer picture of where it is in space. For sensory-seeking children whose interoception and proprioception are under-responsive, this input is genuinely regulating — it calms the arousal level of the nervous system and reduces the need to crash, squeeze, and seek sensation through other means. For hypersensitive children, deep pressure sometimes feels good even when light touch doesn't, because it registers differently in the nervous system.

The question isn't whether deep pressure helps. For most sensory children, something in this category will be useful. The question is which tool, and when.

The five tools at a glance

Before the comparison table, here's a one-line summary of each tool's purpose:

Tool 1

Weighted blanket

Full-body deep pressure. Best for bedtime, rest, and winding down after a hard day. The most powerful tool in the category.

Tool 2

Weighted lap pad

Focused pressure on the lap and thighs. Discreet, portable, and designed for concentration: at school, at homework, at mealtimes.

Tool 3

Compression vest

Even pressure across the torso, worn like a garment. The only tool that moves with the child — suitable for active, on-the-go use.

Tool 4

Sensory body sock

Whole-body proprioceptive input through resistive movement inside a stretchy bag. Most useful as a therapeutic play tool or in sensory sessions.

Tool 5

Weighted stuffed animal

A comfort object with gentle weight. Lower therapeutic intensity than the others, but excellent as a soothing, portable companion — especially for younger children.

Side-by-side comparison

🛏️ Weighted blanket 🪑 Lap pad 🧥 Compression vest 🧦 Body sock 🧸 Weighted plush
Coverage Whole body Lap and thighs Torso and shoulders Whole body (active) Held area only
Best for Sleep, rest, calming School, homework, mealtimes Active daytime use, school Sensory play, therapy sessions Comfort, transitions, anxiety
Portable? Bulky — stays at home Yes — fits in a school bag Yes — worn under clothing Needs space to use Yes — pocket or bag
Discreet at school? No Yes — on the lap, under desk Yes — under a school jumper No — needs open floor space Can be kept in a bag
Moves with the child? No No Yes During use only Yes
Weight guideline ~10% body weight ~10% body weight 5–10% body weight Stretch resistance, not weight ~10% body weight
Suitable age 3+ (with supervision) 3+ 3+ (OT guidance recommended) 3+ All ages (size-dependent)
Typical UK price £25–£80 £15–£40 £30–£60 £15–£30 £15–£35
Where to start If sleep is the main issue If focus at school is the goal If the child needs it during movement If therapist has recommended proprioceptive play If child needs something to carry and hold

Who is each tool actually for?

The weighted blanket: start here if sleep is the problem

A weighted blanket is typically the first thing an OT suggests for a sensory child who struggles to sleep. The deep even pressure across the whole body mimics the feeling of being held, which is genuinely calming for most children with a sensory-seeking profile. The standard weight guideline is 10% of the child's body weight — so a 30kg child would use a 3kg blanket — though some children prefer slightly more and some less. Starting lighter is always safer.

The limitation is obvious: it stays in bed. You can't carry it to school, use it during homework, or take it in the car. Some parents use a weighted blanket on the sofa as a calming-down tool after school, which works well alongside a sensory tent or quiet space. But if the problem is focus during the day rather than sleep, a lap pad or vest will serve your child better.

One important note: avoid cheap single-layer blankets where the weight can shift and settle in clumps. The best weighted blankets use glass bead filling stitched into individual pockets so the weight stays evenly distributed regardless of how the blanket is used.

The weighted lap pad: start here if focus at school is the problem

A weighted lap pad is the most practical tool for the school day. It sits flat on the lap, stays hidden under a desk, and provides a steady stream of proprioceptive input to the thighs and lower body without drawing attention. For children who rock, bounce, or get up repeatedly during tasks, the lap pad gives the nervous system something to register and can reduce that restless movement significantly.

Most lap pads are filled with glass beads or plastic pellets and are roughly the size of an A4 sheet. They fold flat for a school bag. Many UK schools already have them in SEN resource rooms, so yours may not need a fight — introducing it through the SENCO with a note from an OT, if you have one, is usually straightforward. Lap pads are also effective at the dinner table and during homework, so one pad can genuinely cover multiple parts of the day.

The compression vest: start here if the child needs input during movement

A compression vest is the only tool in this category that goes where the child goes. It's worn like a waistcoat, under a school jumper if needed, and provides constant even pressure across the torso and shoulders throughout the day. For Jude, this was the most transformative change because it worked during PE, during break time, during the walk to school — not just when he was sitting still.

There are two main types: pocket-weight vests with removable weighted inserts, and bead-filled vests where the weight is distributed through the fabric itself. The bead-filled design tends to distribute pressure more evenly and avoids the lumpy-pocket problem, but it means the weight isn't adjustable. An OT can help establish the right weight range before you buy.

The standard guideline for compression vests is slightly lower than blankets: no more than 5–10% of body weight, because the pressure is more focused on the torso rather than distributed across the whole body. Always follow OT guidance here rather than guessing.

The sensory body sock: start here if the OT has recommended proprioceptive play

A sensory body sock works differently from the others. Rather than adding weight, it provides resistance — the child climbs inside a stretchy lycra bag and moves against the material, which gives the muscles and joints strong proprioceptive feedback. The input is intense and active rather than calm and passive.

This is not a sit-at-the-desk tool. Body socks are used in sensory rooms, in therapy sessions, and at home as a planned proprioceptive activity. They work brilliantly as part of a sensory diet for sensory-seeking children who need heavy-work input built into their day. Many children use them as a precursor to a calming activity: ten minutes of body-sock movement, then the weighted blanket or lap pad for settling.

The weighted stuffed animal: start here if comfort and transitions are the problem

A weighted stuffed animal is the most portable and the least therapeutically intense tool here. It's a comfort object that happens to provide gentle proprioceptive input — useful for children who are anxious, struggling with transitions, or need something to hold during overwhelming moments. The weight is lower than a full blanket, and the familiar, comforting shape makes it easier for younger children to accept than a vest or lap pad.

One thing worth being clear about: not all heavy plush toys are true weighted therapeutic tools. Warmies, for example, are under 1kg and are more of a warming comfort item than a deep pressure intervention. If you want genuine proprioceptive benefit, check that the stuffed animal specifies a therapeutic weight and meets the 10% body weight guideline for your child.

Can you use more than one?

Yes — most families end up using at least two, each in different contexts. The most common combination is a lap pad or compression vest for school and a weighted blanket for bedtime. Some children use a body sock as part of a morning sensory circuit before school and then keep a weighted stuffed animal in their bag for harder moments during the day.

The one thing to watch is cumulative weight. If a child is wearing a compression vest and also has a weighted lap pad, make sure the combined load still falls within safe limits. An OT supervising a full sensory diet will factor this in. If you're managing without an OT, err on the side of lighter rather than heavier.

A sensory profile is the most useful document to have when navigating these choices. It maps your child's specific responses across all sensory systems, so you're not guessing which tools fit their profile — and it gives any school, OT, or paediatrician a clear picture of what's already been tried and what helps.

Helping school get on board

Weighted lap pads and compression vests are both well-established in UK SEN practice. Most primary schools will accept them without requiring any formal documentation, especially if introduced through the SENCO. A note from your child's OT or paediatrician can make this process smoother and is worth requesting if you have the access.

If your child has a SEN Support Plan or EHCP, weighted tools used consistently can be written in as a reasonable adjustment under the Equality Act 2010. This means the school is obligated to provide or allow access to them, not just permit them when convenient.

Weighted Blankets
Sensory Sorted Review
Best Weighted Blankets for Autistic & ADHD Children
Five picks from budget to premium, with guidance on weight, filling, and washability.
Weighted Lap Pads
Sensory Sorted Review
Best Weighted Lap Pads for Children
The most practical school tool in the deep pressure category — reviewed and ranked.
Weighted Compression Vests
Sensory Sorted Review
Best Weighted Compression Vests for Children
Four picks including bead-filled and pocket-weight designs, with OT context throughout.
Sensory Body Socks
Sensory Sorted Review
Best Sensory Body Socks for Children
Resistive proprioceptive play — reviewed with guidance on sizes, materials, and how to use them.
Weighted Stuffed Animals
Sensory Sorted Review
Best Weighted Stuffed Animals for Children
Comfort objects with real therapeutic weight — and how to tell the difference from unweighted plush.

Questions parents ask most

The things I hear most often when families are navigating this category.

How heavy should a weighted tool be for my child?
The standard OT guideline is approximately 10% of the child's body weight for most weighted items — blankets, lap pads, and stuffed animals. For compression vests, OTs typically recommend no more than 5–10% of body weight, as the vest applies pressure across the torso rather than distributing it across the full body. When in doubt, start lighter and observe your child's response before increasing.
Can a child use more than one weighted tool at a time?
Yes — and many do. A compression vest at school and a weighted blanket at night is a very common combination. The key is not stacking tools in a way that pushes the total weight beyond safe limits. A sensory diet set up with an OT will map out when each tool is appropriate and ensure the combined weight stays within guidelines.
Do weighted tools actually work? Is there evidence?
The research evidence is mixed — most studies are small. Anecdotal evidence from OTs and SEN families is consistently positive, and deep pressure input through proprioception is well-established in sensory integration theory as a regulatory tool. Most OTs treat weighted tools as a reasonable starting point within a wider sensory diet, rather than a standalone intervention. The best test is your child's own response over two to three weeks of consistent use.
Can weighted tools be used in school?
Weighted lap pads and compression vests are both commonly used in UK schools. The lap pad goes on the lap under the desk; the vest under a school jumper. You don't need an EHCP for a school to allow these, but a note from your child's OT can smooth the conversation if there is any resistance. Weighted blankets are less practical in the classroom but sometimes used in school sensory rooms.
My child doesn't like being touched — can they still use weighted tools?
Possibly. Some tactile-hypersensitive children tolerate deep pressure even when they dislike light touch, because the signals register differently in the nervous system. A weighted blanket on top of clothing is a low-risk first test — the pressure is distributed, and the child controls it themselves. If they resist, don't push it. An OT can assess whether deep pressure is appropriate and introduce it gradually.