The diving reflex is an automatic physiological response triggered when you immerse your face in cold water or hold your breath. It can have fascinating and practical effects: slowing the heart, conserving oxygen, and even calming the body.
This reflex isn’t just a curiosity; it has real-world applications, from helping people dive deeper underwater to assisting doctors in managing certain heart rhythm problems.

What Causes the Diving Reflex?
The diving reflex is an automatic physiological reaction that helps the body conserve oxygen during submersion in water. When one holds one’s breath underwater, oxygen is gradually depleted from the blood without being replenished—a state known as hypoxia. Because the brain and heart are especially sensitive to low oxygen levels, the body prioritizes delivering oxygen to these vital organs, while extremities such as the arms and legs can better tolerate reduced oxygen supply.- Heart Rate Slows (Bradycardia): The vagus nerve acts as the body’s natural braking system, reducing how hard the heart has to work and reducing its oxygen demand to conserve available oxygen. Often, as your heart rate slows, your body begins to feel more relaxed.
- Blood Is Redirected to Vital Organs: Blood is funneled to the brain, heart, and chest, to ensure oxygen goes to where it’s needed most. Blood vessels in the arms and legs constrict, funneling blood toward the organs least able to tolerate oxygen deprivation. This can sharpen thinking, boost energy, improve movement, and enhance overall function. Simultaneously, water pressure against the body pushes blood from the limbs toward the chest in a process called blood shift. For people who deep dive, this also helps protect the lungs from pressure damage.
- Oxygen-Carrying Capacity Increases: The diving response boosts your blood’s oxygen-carrying capacity by tapping into the spleen, which stores a reserve of red blood cells. Although the spleen can contract almost instantly, trained divers gradually increase its size over weeks, enhancing oxygen reserves even further.
What Are the Benefits of Diving Reflex?
The diving reflex is central to the body’s ability to survive submersion. By reducing oxygen demand and concentrating blood flow where it matters most, it extends the window of time a person can remain underwater without harm.1. Stress and Anxiety Relief
Activating the diving reflex produces effects that are almost the opposite of a panic response. It slows the heart, steadies breathing, and shifts the nervous system away from a “fight-or-flight” state. Because it’s a physical, automatic response, it works independently of conscious thought, making it useful even when anxiety interferes with deliberate calming techniques.- Panic Attacks: Counteracting the racing heart, shortness of breath, and dizziness that define a panic episode
- Acute Distress: Providing a practical, immediate intervention that requires no equipment
2. Managing Abnormal Heart Rhythms
The diving reflex can be used as a simple, noninvasive technique to interrupt certain types of fast heart rhythms, including paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, a type of abnormal heart rhythm in which a short circuit in the heart’s upper chamber causes a rapid heartbeat that starts and stops suddenly.3. Protection of Infants From Drowning
The diving reflex is particularly strong in the first year of life, driven by a highly active parasympathetic nervous system in newborns. This allows the response to be triggered more easily and intensely than in adults. Infants show more pronounced bradycardia—slowing of the heart rate—than adults when their faces are submerged in water, and the reflex can occur without breath-holding.Although its intensity gradually decreases through infancy, it is thought to offer a survival advantage during accidental submersion, a leading cause of child mortality globally.
4. Deep Diving Without Gear
The diving reflex plays a direct role in the performance of competitive freedivers and synchronized swimmers. Reducing heart rate and redistributing blood allows the body to function under prolonged low-oxygen conditions. As a result, humans can dive deeply without specialized equipment and remain underwater longer while maintaining safety.How to Train Diving Reflex
You don’t need to swim to trigger the diving reflex. The diving reflex can be triggered at home to promote calm and manage stress, but it’s best to consult a trained professional before attempting any of the following techniques, especially if you have heart conditions, respiratory conditions, or other medical conditions.- Cold Water Facial Immersion: You can fill a bowl or sink with cold water and gently submerge your face for about 30 seconds. The colder the temperature, the stronger the effect.
- Cold Compress: If you can’t submerge your face, place an ice pack, a bag of frozen vegetables, or a cold, damp cloth over your face, focusing on the area around your eyes and nose.
- Hold Your Breath Briefly: If you’re using the compress method, hold your breath for 10 to 30 seconds to help activate the reflex.
- Bend Over: For both submersion and compress methods, leaning forward enhances the reflex and further signals your body to shift into a “rest-and-digest” state.
- Other Water-Based Activities: Cold-water face splashes, showers, immersion, and flotation can lower heart rate, blood pressure, and cortisol levels.
- Repeat if Needed: You can repeat the process a few times until you start to feel calmer, as the reflex typically works quickly to slow your body down.
- People With Heart Conditions: Since the diving reflex can slow your heart rate quickly, avoid these techniques if you have heart problems, a pacemaker, or an unusually low resting heart rate—consult your doctor first.
- People With Seizure Disorders (Epilepsy): Cold water or breath-holding may trigger a seizure. If a seizure occurs while one is submerged, the risk of drowning increases significantly, so extreme caution is essential.
- People With Severe Asthma or Respiratory Conditions: Sudden cold exposure to the face can provoke bronchospasm (tightening of the airway muscles) or difficulty breathing.
- Anyone Exposed to Extreme Cold: Prolonged immersion in icy water can increase the risk of hypothermia or fainting, so it should be avoided.
What Are the Potential Risks of Diving Reflex?
Since the reflex reduces the body’s awareness of its own oxygen depletion, it can suppress the normal urge to breathe, making blackout more dangerous. This masking effect means that oxygen levels can fall low enough to cause sudden loss of consciousness—known as shallow-water or hypoxic blackout—without adequate warning.Other factors, such as hyperventilation (breathing faster or deeper than the body actually needs), rapid descent, and pulmonary edema, can further impair brain oxygen supply. As a result, even highly trained divers remain at risk of losing consciousness underwater.
“Initiating the dive reflex is a quick, simple, and noninvasive clinical maneuver that effectively increases vagal tone,” the researchers said.







