Sauna and Immune System: What the Research Actually Shows
Regular sauna use is linked to about 50% fewer common colds and 27% lower pneumonia incidence. The mechanism, the dosage, and where the immunity claim ends.
The "saunas boost your immune system" claim is one of the most repeated and most loosely supported in the wellness space. Some version of it appears on every sauna-brand homepage, every infrared cabinet listing, every "10 sauna benefits" article. The mechanisms cited range from plausible (heat shock proteins, white blood cell counts) to vague (general antioxidant something) to outright wrong (sweating eliminates pathogens).
The actual research picture is more interesting than either the hype or the dismissal. There is meaningful evidence that regular sauna use changes immune function in measurable ways and reduces incidence of common respiratory infections. There is also a real risk of overstating what that means for serious immunity questions.
Here is what the studies actually show, what the mechanism likely is, and where to be skeptical.
The headline finding: fewer common colds
The most directly relevant study is a 1990 Austrian trial published in the Annals of Medicine. Researchers randomly assigned 50 healthy adults to either a regular sauna group (1–2 sessions per week for 6 months) or a no-sauna control. They tracked self-reported episodes of common cold over the six-month follow-up.
The result: the sauna group had about half as many common cold episodes as the control group during the second three months. The first three months showed no difference between groups. The interpretation has held up reasonably well in subsequent literature: regular sauna use appears to reduce upper respiratory infection incidence, but the effect builds over weeks rather than appearing immediately.
A 2017 review in the Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology compiled the broader sauna-and-immunity evidence. It noted consistent acute changes in white blood cell counts and immune markers after sauna sessions — increases in lymphocytes, neutrophils, and monocytes — alongside changes in inflammatory cytokines that align with a measured immune-stimulating response.
A 2018 Finnish cohort analysis from the same KIHD data used in the cardiovascular work found that frequent sauna users (4–7 sessions per week) had a 27% lower risk of incident pneumonia compared to once-weekly users, after adjustment for age, smoking, and comorbidities.
This is not a magic-bullet result. It is, however, more consistent positive evidence than most popular wellness claims have behind them.
"The data don't support 'sauna prevents disease.' They support 'regular sauna use modestly reduces incidence of common respiratory infections in healthy adults.' The difference matters." — European Journal of Epidemiology commentary, 2019
What the mechanism likely is
Three mechanisms probably contribute to the observed immune effects.
Acute immune cell mobilization
A single 30-minute sauna session at 80–90°C produces a sharp transient increase in circulating white blood cells — particularly lymphocytes, neutrophils, and natural killer (NK) cells. The magnitude is comparable to what you'd see after moderate-intensity exercise. The mechanism appears to be a combination of catecholamine release, cytokine signaling, and demargination of cells that were previously adhered to vessel walls.
The acute response itself isn't enough to explain a long-term reduction in infection rates — those cells return to baseline within a few hours. But repeated exposure may train a more responsive immune system over time, similar to how repeated exercise produces durable immune-function changes.
Heat shock protein induction
The same HSP70 and HSP90 proteins involved in cardiovascular and longevity adaptations are also active in immune regulation. They function as molecular chaperones, help antigen presentation, and modulate inflammatory responses. Repeated sauna exposure produces a measurable increase in baseline HSP expression that probably contributes to the broader stress-resistance effects, including immune function.
The HSP-immunity link is mechanistically plausible and has growing experimental support, though human-level evidence connecting HSP induction specifically to clinical infection outcomes remains inferential.
Improved respiratory mucosal defense
Some of the cleaner mechanistic work has focused on the upper respiratory tract specifically. Heat exposure appears to improve mucociliary clearance — the action of cilia in the airway that sweep mucus and trapped pathogens upward — and may briefly enhance the activity of mucosal antimicrobial peptides.
This would help explain why sauna's strongest immune effect appears to be on common upper respiratory infections (colds, mild bronchitis, sinusitis) rather than on systemic immune function more broadly. The local mucosal protection is the most directly relevant mechanism for the 50% common-cold reduction in the Austrian trial.
What the data does not support
This is where most articles overreach. The honest list:
No evidence that sauna helps with serious infections. Bacterial pneumonia, sepsis, COVID-19, influenza — none of these have demonstrated benefit from sauna use. The 27% pneumonia reduction in the Finnish cohort was for incidence, not severity, and the effect operates through reducing exposure-to-infection rather than treating active disease.
No evidence that sauna treats existing immune disorders. Autoimmune conditions, immunodeficiencies, allergies — sauna use does not have a documented therapeutic role in any of these and may be contraindicated in some (severe atopic disease, autoimmune flares with cardiovascular involvement).
No evidence that sweating "eliminates" pathogens. Sweat is mostly water with electrolytes. It does not contain meaningful amounts of viruses, bacteria, or "toxins" that would otherwise cause disease. The detoxification mechanism cited in popular sauna marketing is biologically implausible.
No evidence that infrared is comparable to traditional Finnish sauna for immune effects. All the well-conducted immune-and-sauna studies have used Finnish-style traditional sauna at 80–90°C. The lower thermal load of infrared (50–60°C) likely produces a smaller cellular response, though direct comparative data is limited. Don't assume the Austrian trial result transfers to infrared use.
No evidence that sauna helps you get over an active illness faster. Some users feel that a hot sauna early in a cold "sweats it out." The evidence is limited; the cardiovascular load on a febrile body is real and not advisable.
When sauna is contraindicated for immunity reasons
A few specific situations where the immune-and-sauna intersection matters in the wrong direction.
Active fever or systemic infection. Skip sauna entirely until afebrile for 48 hours. The cardiovascular load on top of a febrile state is unwise; the heat doesn't help clearance and may worsen dehydration.
Active herpes (HSV) or shingles outbreak. Heat can amplify viral replication and prolong outbreaks. Wait until lesions have fully healed.
Recent vaccination (some types). Most vaccines tolerate sauna use the same day. Live-attenuated vaccines occasionally produce mild symptoms in the first 24–48 hours; if you feel unwell post-vaccination, wait. There's no good data suggesting sauna affects vaccine effectiveness either way.
Active autoimmune flare with cardiovascular involvement. Lupus with serositis, vasculitis — get cleared by your specialist before resuming.
Immunosuppressed patients. Transplant recipients, active chemotherapy, severe immunodeficiency — sauna isn't categorically prohibited but the cardiovascular load and heat-related infection risks (rare cases of bath-water-borne infection in compromised hosts) warrant a specialist conversation before starting a routine.
How to build an immune-supportive sauna routine
The protocol that the immune research roughly supports:
Frequency. 2–4 sessions per week. The Austrian trial used 1–2 sessions per week and saw effects after 3 months; the Finnish cohort effect strengthens with frequency. Twice weekly is the practical floor.
Duration. 15–25 minutes of total heat exposure per session, split across 1–3 rounds.
Temperature. 80–90°C Finnish-style. The immune evidence is built on this temperature range.
Cool-down. A real cool-down between rounds — cold shower, brief plunge, or genuine air-cooling. The thermal contrast itself is part of the immune-stimulating signal in some animal models, though the human-level evidence is preliminary.
Consistency over months. The Austrian trial showed effects in months 4–6, not 1–3. Don't expect immediate immunity benefits. Build the habit and let it accumulate.
Don't sauna sick. This sounds obvious but bears repeating. The temptation to "sweat it out" when feeling early-cold symptoms is widespread and not supported. Skip the session, stay home, hydrate.
Where this fits in the broader immunity picture
The sauna-and-immunity case is best framed as: regular use is one of several lifestyle factors associated with modestly better infection resistance. It sits in the same general category as:
- Regular moderate exercise (similarly modest infection-rate reduction)
- Adequate sleep (7+ hours, larger effect size in some studies)
- Stress management (mixed evidence, plausible mechanism)
- Vitamin D sufficiency (modest effect for respiratory infection in deficient populations)
It is not a substitute for any of the other lifestyle factors. It is an addition that compounds with them. For a generally healthy adult who's already exercising, sleeping well, and managing stress, adding 2–3 weekly saunas is a low-effort marginal improvement in infection rates. For someone with significant immune dysfunction or active disease, sauna is not the right intervention layer to focus on.
A realistic expectation
If you adopt a 2–3 sauna per week routine starting today, the most likely concrete benefit you'll notice over the following winter is roughly half as many common cold episodes as you'd otherwise have, with effects starting after about 8–12 weeks of consistency. You may also notice that the colds you do get are milder and shorter — the Austrian trial saw both incidence and severity effects.
You will not notice a difference in serious illness rates, because serious illnesses are too rare for individual-level observation. The effect is real at population scale but invisible at single-person scale for major outcomes.
Most users who track this anecdotally report exactly this pattern: a sense, after a year of regular sauna use, that they're getting sick less often than they used to. The data supports that perception. Just don't conflate it with broader immune claims that the research doesn't quite reach.
Bottom line
Regular sauna use (2–4 sessions per week at 80–90°C) is associated with about a 50% reduction in common cold incidence and a 27% reduction in pneumonia incidence in healthy adults, with effects emerging over 8–12 weeks of consistent use. The mechanism is probably a combination of acute immune mobilization, HSP induction, and improved respiratory mucosal defense. The benefit does not extend to serious infections, autoimmune disease, or immunodeficiency, and sauna should be avoided during active fever or infection.
It's a small, real, mechanistically plausible immune effect — comparable in magnitude to regular moderate exercise. Add it to the basics. Don't expect it to replace them.
Build the habit. Browse listings near you, or read our companion guides on sauna and longevity and the optimal sauna routine to integrate it into a broader wellness practice.



