
It's always the same three failures.
It covers one spot — so you line up two or three pads chasing pain that's in your back, your belly and your hips at the same time. It cools down or shuts off after 30 minutes — right as the flare peaks. And run it hot enough to actually help, and it leaves those brown marks on your skin.
EndoWrap was built backwards from those three failures: cover everything, stay hot as long as you need, and spread the heat evenly so it never scorches one patch.
What you've been doing
One small pad — or a hot water bottle that cools and you're scared will pop — moved around chasing the pain, shutting off every 30 minutes, leaving marks where it sat.
What actually helps
One wrap around the whole pelvis. Deep, even heat that stays on as long as you leave it. Plus a red-light mode in the same device.
Endo pain isn't a dot. So why heat it like one?
When a flare hits, it rarely stays politely in your lower belly. It radiates into your lower back, your hips, down into the pelvis. A standard pad reaches one of those at a time. The wrap reaches all of them at once.
Covers one spot — usually the lower belly. The rest of the pain stays untouched.
Wraps the belly, hips, pelvis and lower back — every flare zone, at the same time.

It wraps the whole pain map — and the heat actually stays.
Slip it on and it fastens right around your lower body: lower back, abdomen, hips, and down over the pelvic area. Turn it up and it holds deep, steady heat for as long as you leave it on — no 30-minute cutoff fighting you mid-flare.
On top of the heat, a built-in red-light mode gives you a second drug-free option in the same wrap — the kind of light that's been studied for period pain.
Wrap it on
It fastens around your whole pelvis — front, back and sides — so every painful zone is covered at once.
Deep heat that stays
Multiple levels of steady heat that hold for hours, instead of pulsing or shutting off when you need them most.
Add red light
A built-in red-light mode layers in a second drug-free option — no gels, no sticky pads, nothing to reapply.

For the days you're not going anywhere.
A flare day is a stay-in-bed, curl-on-the-couch day. So the wrap plugs in and never dies on you — no battery quitting an hour in, no getting up to reheat a pack. You set the heat, wrap up, and stay put.
It's the difference between a gadget you fight with and something you just… lie down in.
60 days to feel the difference — or your money back.
Heat isn't a gimmick. It's one of the most-studied things for period pain.
Doctors have recommended heat for cramping for as long as anyone can remember — and the research backs it up. In one clinical study, continuous low-level heat eased menstrual pain about as well as ibuprofen. EndoWrap's job is simply to deliver that heat everywhere it hurts, for as long as you need it.
women of reproductive age live with endometriosis — most spend years cycling through pads that don't cover enough or don't last.
World Health Organization
Heat and red light ease the pain of a flare. They are not a treatment or cure for endometriosis — for diagnosis and management, your doctor and your care plan come first. EndoWrap is for the hard days in between.
I have endo and I've tried everything. This is the first thing that covers all of it at once — and it actually stays hot. I lie down in it and I can finally relax.

What changes on a flare day
The first thing people notice isn't dramatic — it's that they stop getting up. No reheating a pack, no shuffling a pad from back to belly. They wrap it on, turn it up, and stay down.
The other thing they mention: no burn marks. Even heat across the whole area, instead of one scorching spot.
A new heating pad every year — plus everything else
Most people with endo cycle through a cheap pad that dies within a year, a hot water bottle, stick-on patches, and a steady spend on painkillers. The full-pelvic wraps that actually cover everything run around $120 — and often won't even ship outside the US.
This is $89.95. Once. If it doesn't change your flare days, send it back.
Real words from women with endo
My pain hits my back, belly and hips at the same time. This is the first thing that covers all of it — I'm not juggling three pads anymore.
Every other pad shut off right when I needed it most. This one stays hot as long as I leave it on. On a bad flare, that's everything.
I run it hot and I haven't had a single brown mark. After years of toasted skin, that alone sold me.
Bought it for the heat, honestly. The red light is the part I didn't expect to actually feel.
I can lie down and actually relax now instead of clutching a hot water bottle praying it stays warm.
Years of endo, every pad on Amazon. This is the one I reach for now. Wish I'd had it a long time ago.
Try it for 60 days. The real kind of guarantee.
Use it through a couple of cycles. If it doesn't change your flare days enough to keep it, send it back for a full refund — no restocking fee, no hoops. We make it this easy because we know what it's like to spend money on things that didn't help.
Before you buy
That's the number-one thing women are sick of, so it's built to last and backed by a 60-day guarantee — if it fails you, you're covered. And because it's plug-in, there's no battery to wear out and quit on you.
Those marks come from one small, scorching-hot spot used over and over. The wrap spreads heat evenly across the whole area and gives you multiple levels, so you can run it warm-and-steady instead of blazing-hot on one patch. Use the timer if you tend to doze off.
Honestly, yes — like any heating pad, the comfort is during use. The difference is it stays hot for as long as a flare lasts and covers everywhere at once, so you're not chasing the pain around or getting up to reheat anything.
For a flare day, no. Cordless pads die an hour in, right when you still need them. This is made for the stay-in-bed days: plug it in once and it never quits on you. Constant heat beats a dead battery.
It's a second drug-free option built into the same wrap. Red and near-infrared light has been studied for period pain with early, promising results. Think of it as a nice extra on top of the heat — not a replacement for it.
It's fully adjustable and wraps a wide range of sizes — including on a bloated, tender flare day when nothing else feels comfortable.
No — and we won't pretend otherwise. It's heat and red light for symptom comfort during a flare; it doesn't treat the condition itself. For that, your doctor and your care plan come first. This is for the hard days in between.
Your pain was never in one spot. Your heat finally isn't either.
Full-pelvic coverage, deep heat that stays, and a red-light mode — built for the flare days. If it doesn't change them, send it back.