What theresearch shows
The most widely cited evidence comes from a largeprospective cohort study conducted in Finland, where sauna use is deeplyembedded in daily life.
Researchers followed over 2,000 middle-aged men formore than 20 years, tracking their sauna habits and long-term health outcomes.Participants were grouped based on how often they used a sauna each week:
-
Once per week
-
Two to three times per week
-
Four to seven times per week
The results showed a clear and consistent pattern.
Compared to those using the sauna once per week,individuals using it:
-
2–3 times per week had a significantly lower risk of cardiovascular disease and mortality
-
4–7 times per week had an even greater reduction in risk
In the highest-use group, the reduction in risk offatal cardiovascular events and all-cause mortality was substantial.
Importantly, this was not a simple “sauna users vsnon-users” comparison. It showed a graded relationship, where morefrequent use was associated with progressively better outcomes.
This is one of the strongest signals we see inlifestyle epidemiology.
Why mightsauna use have these effects?
While the exact mechanisms are still beingexplored, several well-established physiological responses help explain thefindings.
1.Cardiovascular conditioning
Sauna exposure increases heart rate and cardiacoutput in a way that is often compared to moderate exercise.
During a typical session:
-
Heart rate can rise to 100–150 beats per minute
-
Blood vessels dilate
-
Blood pressure may initially rise and then fall
Over time, this repeated exposure may improve:
-
Vascular function
-
Endothelial health
-
Blood pressure regulation
In effect, sauna use appears to provide a form of passivecardiovascular training.
- Heatstress and hormesis
Sauna use is a classic example of hormesis —where a mild, controlled stressor triggers beneficial adaptations.
Heat exposure stimulates the production of heatshock proteins, which play a role in:
-
Cellular repair
-
Protein folding
-
Protection against oxidative stress
These mechanisms are thought to contribute toimproved resilience at the cellular level, which may be relevant for ageing andchronic disease.
3.Inflammation and metabolic health
Chronic low-grade inflammation is a key driver ofmany modern diseases, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, andneurodegenerative conditions.
Some studies suggest that regular sauna use isassociated with:
-
Reduced inflammatory markers
-
Improved insulin sensitivity
-
Better metabolic profiles
While causality is harder to establish, thedirection of effect is consistent with the broader longevity literature.
4.Nervous system and recovery
Sauna use may also influence the autonomic nervoussystem.
After heat exposure, there is often a shift towards parasympathetic (rest-and-recover) activity, which can:
-
Promote relaxation
-
Improve sleep quality
-
Reduce stress
This may be one reason sauna use is commonlyassociated with improved wellbeing, beyond purely physical health outcomes.
Does morealways mean better?
The Finnish data suggests that increasing frequencyis associated with increasing benefit, but that does not mean “as much aspossible” is always optimal.
Most of the observed benefits occur within a rangeof:
- 2–4 sessions per week, with additional gains at higher frequencies
Session duration in the key studies was typicallyaround:
- 15–20 minutes per session
There is likely a point beyond which additionalexposure produces diminishing returns, and individual tolerance varies.
What typeof sauna matters?
Most of the strongest evidence comes from traditionalFinnish saunas, which use dry heat at relatively high temperatures (often70–100°C).
Infrared saunas operate at lower temperatures andmay still provide benefits, but the evidence base is currently stronger fortraditional heat exposure.
That said, the underlying principle — repeated heatstress — likely applies across different modalities, even if the magnitude ofeffect differs.
Practicalguidance
For most people, a simple and effective approachwould be:
-
Aim for 2–4 sauna sessions per week
-
Spend 15–20 minutes per session
-
Stay hydrated before and after
-
Build up gradually if new to sauna use
Those with existing cardiovascular conditions orother health concerns should seek medical advice before starting regular saunause.
TheForever Well view
At Forever Well, we focus on interventions thatcombine:
-
Strong evidence
-
Clear mechanisms
-
Practical implementation
Sauna use fits all three.
It is not a replacement for exercise, sleep, ornutrition, but it appears to be a powerful adjunct — particularly forcardiovascular and metabolic health.
The fact that benefits increase with frequencymakes it especially interesting. Few interventions show such a consistentdose-response relationship.
Bottomline
Regular sauna use is associated with meaningfulreductions in cardiovascular risk and all-cause mortality, with greaterbenefits seen at higher frequencies.
If you have access to a sauna, using it a few timesper week is a simple, low-effort intervention that may have a disproportionateimpact on long-term health.
References
Laukkanen et al. (2015). Association betweensauna bathing and fatal cardiovascular and all-cause mortality events. JAMAInternal Medicine. Laukkanen et al. (2018). Sauna bathing is associated with reduced risk ofstroke. Neurology. Hussain & Cohen (2018). Clinical effects of regular dry sauna bathing.Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine.