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Sauna is the part that works. HRV rose and heart rate fell on every measure we looked at, both the night of and the night after, and the effect held up after we controlled for things like activity, illness, and alcohol.
Cold plunge on its own does very little. The numbers point the right way, but they're small and most of them could easily be chance. Only one of the six measures came out clearly, which isn't enough to lean on.
Stacking sauna and cold plunge doesn't beat the sauna alone. You get the same drop in heart rate and no extra gain in HRV. The cold plunge isn't adding anything the heat wasn't already giving you.
Why We Ran This Experiment
A lot of people do a sauna and a cold plunge in the same session because they assume the two add up. The heat does one thing, the cold does another, and together you get more than either on its own. It's a reasonable guess, and we wanted to know whether it was true.
A few weeks ago we published what saunas do to the body overnight, and it got more attention than we expected. The question that kept coming back was about the cold plunge. People wanted to know whether adding one made the sauna work better, or whether the cold was doing something by itself.
We pulled 31,424 days from people who logged a sauna, a cold plunge, or both, and looked at how their heart behaved that night and the night after. Can we prove with data the effects of each individually, and both of them together?
Figure 1: Overnight HRV change versus a normal day. Only the sauna reached significance. Adding a cold plunge, alone or stacked, did not.
The hard part of a question like this isn't running the numbers, but making sure you are measuring the thing you think you are measuring. If someone tends to sauna after a hard workout, the recovery you see that night might come from the workout rather than the sauna.
That's why we held a lot constant. We compared each person against their own baseline and accounted for the month, the day, and for illness, alcohol, caffeine, stress, travel, steps, time spent active, and how demanding the day was overall. We used only nights with a full sleep record. What remains is closer to the effect of the heat and the cold themselves.
We tracked two things that wearables read well overnight. One is HRV, where a higher number means better recovery. The other is heart rate, where lower is better.
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The sauna effect is clear. HRV rose and heart rate fell on every measure we looked at, on the night of the sauna and again the night after, and all of it was significant. HRV went up by about 0.85 ms the night of and 0.69 ms the night after. Resting and sleeping heart rate dropped by roughly half a beat per minute. None of it was borderline, and it survived every control we added.
Group
Total Days
Sauna
22,088
Cold Plunge
7,195
Sauna + Cold Plunge
2,141
Total days
31,424
Cold on its own is a different story. The numbers point the right way, but most of them are too small to trust. HRV rose a little, around 0.3 ms, though not by enough to rule out chance. Heart rate edged down, but the effect sat at the border of significance for almost every measure.
One result, sleeping heart rate the night after, came through cleanly. One out of six is not a pattern. The honest read is that cold plunging alone may do something, but this data cannot show it with any confidence.
Stacking is the case people care about most, because it is the thing they actually do. If the sauna helps and the cold helps, doing both should help more. It didn't. On heart rate, stacking worked about as well as the sauna alone, lowering it by a similar amount with the same confidence, but the HRV benefit faded.
With the cold plunge added, the HRV change was no longer significant, and nothing about the combined effect was clearly larger than the sauna by itself. Whatever the cold plunge contributes, it does not show up as extra recovery on top of the heat.
Figure 2: Effect of each protocol on six overnight measures, with color showing significance. Sauna is significant on all six. Stacking works on heart rate but not HRV, and cold lands once in six. n = 31,424 days.
Conclusions
The simplest way to put it is that the sauna is doing the work. It produces the strongest and most consistent signal in the data, higher HRV and lower overnight heart rate, and it does so reliably. Cold exposure on its own is hard to pin down. Stacking the two gives you the heart rate benefit but no clear gain in HRV over the sauna alone.
If you are doing both for recovery, the heat is the part that earns its place. The cold plunge is not hurting anything, and if you enjoy it there is no reason to stop. But the idea that adding it makes your sauna more effective does not hold up in the numbers we can measure.
It is worth being clear about what we measured and what we did not. This is observational data from wearables, not a controlled trial, and it covers overnight heart metrics rather than how you feel or perform the next day. Cold exposure may well do things a sleep tracker cannot see. For the question people kept asking, though, whether stacking improves the recovery numbers we can track, the answer is no.
Summary questions
Does adding a cold plunge to my sauna actually improve recovery?
No — across 31,424 days of wearable data, stacking a cold plunge on top of a sauna did not produce better recovery numbers than the sauna alone. Heart rate dropped by a similar amount either way, but the HRV benefit actually faded when cold was added, becoming statistically non-significant. Whatever the cold plunge contributes, it doesn't show up as extra overnight recovery on top of the heat.
How much does a sauna actually improve my HRV and heart rate overnight?
The sauna effect was significant on all six measures tracked. HRV rose by about 0.85 ms on the night of the sauna and 0.69 ms the night after, while resting and sleeping heart rate dropped by roughly half a beat per minute. These effects survived every control added — month, day, illness, alcohol, caffeine, stress, travel, steps, activity, and overall day demand.
Does cold plunging on its own do anything measurable?
The data can't show it with confidence. Across 7,195 cold-plunge days, HRV rose only about 0.3 ms and heart rate edged down, but only one out of six measures (sleeping heart rate the night after) reached significance cleanly. The directions point the right way, but the effects are too small to trust — cold may do something, but not something a sleep tracker reliably detects.
Why am I not seeing better recovery despite doing the full sauna-and-plunge protocol?
Because the sauna is doing essentially all the work in that protocol. In 2,141 stacked days, the combined session matched the sauna-alone effect on heart rate but lost the HRV benefit entirely. If you're stacking for recovery gains beyond what the heat already provides, the numbers don't support it.
How did you separate the sauna effect from things like workouts or alcohol?
Each person was compared against their own baseline, and the analysis controlled for month, day of week, illness, alcohol, caffeine, stress, travel, steps, active time, and overall day demand. Only nights with a full sleep record were included. That removes most of the confounding — for example, the recovery boost you'd otherwise misattribute to a sauna taken after a hard workout.
Should I stop cold plunging based on this data?
Not necessarily. The cold plunge isn't hurting anything, and if you enjoy it there's no reason to quit. The finding is narrower: the belief that adding cold makes your sauna more effective for overnight recovery doesn't hold up in 31,424 days of wearable data. Cold exposure may still do things outside what a sleep tracker can measure.
Can wearable data actually detect recovery effects from heat and cold exposure?
Yes — at least for heat. With 22,088 sauna days in the dataset, overnight HRV and heart rate changes were clear, consistent, and statistically robust across two nights post-exposure. The same methodology was sensitive enough to detect the sauna signal cleanly, which is what makes the null result for stacking credible rather than just noise.
How long does the sauna effect last?
At least two nights. HRV was elevated by about 0.85 ms on the night of the sauna and still up about 0.69 ms the following night, with heart rate reductions persisting similarly. The recovery signal isn't just an acute same-night response — it carries into the next 24 hours.