Medical disclaimer
Last updated: 2026-06-06
Please read this carefully. Cold-water immersion is not a gentle wellness trend for everyone — for some people it is genuinely dangerous. The information on Cold Plunge Calc is general education, not personalised medical advice.
This is not medical advice
Nothing on this site diagnoses, treats, or prevents any condition, and it is not a substitute for advice from a qualified healthcare professional. The calculator's outputs are estimates from a general model — they cannot account for your individual health.
Real risks of cold water
Cold-water immersion can trigger serious physiological responses, including: [1]
- Cold-shock response — an involuntary gasp and rapid breathing on entry that can cause water inhalation and is a leading cause of sudden drowning.
- Cardiovascular stress — cold causes a sharp rise in heart rate and blood pressure, which can be dangerous for people with heart conditions.
- Hypothermia and after-drop — core temperature can keep falling after you get out, leading to dangerous cooling if you stay in too long or don't rewarm properly.
- Impaired function — cold quickly reduces grip strength and coordination, which matters in open water or unsupervised settings.
Talk to a doctor first if…
Get individual medical clearance before any cold-water immersion if you are pregnant, or have or suspect heart disease, high or unstable blood pressure, a history of stroke, Raynaud's, diabetes, a seizure disorder, or any serious chronic illness. When in doubt, ask before you get in. [2]
Basic safety, always
Never plunge alone in open water, never combine cold immersion with alcohol or drugs, enter slowly to blunt the cold-shock response, and get out at the first sign of feeling unwell. Rewarm gradually rather than jumping straight into a hot shower.
In an emergency
If you or someone else experiences chest pain, severe breathlessness, confusion, fainting, or signs of hypothermia, stop immediately and seek emergency medical help. Do not wait.