An infrared sauna detox is one of the most common reasons people give for buying a home sauna, and also one of the most misunderstood. The word “detox” gets used to sell everything from teas to foot pads, so it is worth separating what actually happens in your body from the marketing. The honest version is more interesting than the hype: your sweat really does carry out certain substances, but a sauna is a support to your body’s own systems, not a magic cleanse.
This article looks at what an infrared sauna detox can and cannot do, what the published evidence shows about heavy metals and plastics in sweat, and how to use a session safely as part of a wider routine. For the wider picture on how these cabins work, see the guides on the Shape House homepage.
What “detox” actually means
Your body is already a detox system. The liver chemically neutralises toxins, the kidneys filter the blood and pass waste out in urine, the gut clears it through stool, and the lungs and skin play a smaller supporting role. Nothing you sit in replaces those organs. When researchers talk about sweating helping to detox, they mean it may add a small extra route for the body to shed a handful of specific compounds, on top of the main pathways, not that it flushes the system clean.
An infrared sauna heats your body directly with infrared wavelengths rather than heating the air around you, so you sweat at a lower air temperature (usually 45 to 60 degrees Celsius) than in a traditional sauna. That makes longer, more comfortable sessions possible, which is where any sweating benefit comes from.
What your sweat can remove
Several peer-reviewed studies have measured toxicants in human sweat, and some appear there at meaningful levels. The most cited is the Blood, Urine and Sweat (BUS) study led by Stephen Genuis, published in the journal Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology in 2011, which found toxic elements including cadmium, lead, mercury and arsenic in participants’ sweat, sometimes at concentrations not matched in their blood or urine. You can read the abstract on PubMed.
A related 2012 study from the same group looked at bisphenol A (BPA), a chemical used in some plastics, and reported it in the sweat of most participants, including some whose blood or urine showed little or none; the abstract is also on PubMed. Other work has found phthalate compounds, used to soften plastics, appearing in sweat as well. Taken together, this is supportive evidence that sweat is a genuine, if minor, excretion route for certain heavy metals and plastic-derived chemicals.
What an infrared sauna cannot do
Two cautions matter. First, the studies above are small, and finding a substance in sweat is not the same as proving that regular sauna use lowers your total body burden or improves a health outcome. The science is promising, not settled. Second, sweat is mostly water and salt; the quantity of any toxin it carries is small next to what your liver and kidneys handle every day. A sauna will not counteract heavy metal exposure, cleanse your organs, or undo a poor diet.
Be sceptical of specific claims that a session removes a fixed percentage of toxins, or that sweat colour shows toxins leaving. Those are not supported. Think of an infrared sauna as one healthy habit that may nudge a natural process along, alongside the far bigger levers of sleep, hydration, exercise and what you eat and drink.
How infrared saunas compare for sweating
For the purpose of sweating, what counts is core temperature and time, not the type of heat. A traditional sauna at 80 to 90 degrees can produce a heavier sweat faster. An infrared sauna produces a steady sweat at a gentler air temperature, which many people tolerate for longer, so the total sweat over a session can be similar. If your only goal is sweating, either works; infrared tends to win on comfort, which makes people more likely to use it regularly, and consistency is what matters.
It is also worth remembering that the best-evidenced reasons to use a sauna have little to do with detox. Large observational studies of regular sauna users, mostly from Finland, link frequent use with better cardiovascular and relaxation outcomes, and most owners simply find the heat helps them wind down, sleep and recover after exercise. If you buy a sauna for those reasons and treat any toxin excretion as a small bonus, your expectations will match what the science actually supports.
How to use a session safely
Sweating hard removes water and electrolytes as well as any trace toxicants, so hydration and minerals are the priority.
- Hydrate before and after: drink water ahead of a session and replace fluids afterwards. Add a pinch of sea salt or an electrolyte drink if you sweat heavily or use the sauna often.
- Start short: 10 to 15 minutes at first, building to 20 to 40 minutes as you adapt. Leave if you feel dizzy, faint or unwell.
- Shower afterwards: rinse off so any substances excreted onto the skin are washed away rather than reabsorbed.
- Time it sensibly: avoid heavy alcohol before a session, and do not use a sauna if you are dehydrated.
Some people should check with a doctor first, including anyone who is pregnant, has heart or blood-pressure conditions, takes medication that affects sweating or fluid balance, or has a condition that impairs temperature regulation. Used sensibly, an infrared sauna is a pleasant, low-effort habit; just hold realistic expectations about the word detox.
Frequently asked questions
Does an infrared sauna really detox your body?
It can add a small extra route for the body to excrete certain heavy metals and plastic-derived chemicals through sweat, which studies have measured. It does not replace the liver and kidneys or cleanse your organs, and the evidence is supportive rather than conclusive.
What toxins come out in sweat?
Published studies have detected cadmium, lead, mercury and arsenic, along with BPA and some phthalates, in human sweat. The amounts are small compared with what the kidneys and liver clear, so sweat is a minor pathway.
How often should you use a sauna to support detox?
There is no proven detox dose. Most home users aim for three to four sessions a week of 20 to 40 minutes, focusing on staying hydrated and consistent rather than chasing a target. More is not automatically better.
Should you drink water during an infrared sauna session?
Yes. Sweating removes water and electrolytes, so drink before and after, and sip during a longer session. Replacing lost minerals with a pinch of salt or an electrolyte drink helps if you sweat heavily.
Is an infrared sauna better than a traditional sauna for detox?
Neither is clearly better for excreting toxins; what matters is how much you sweat and for how long. Infrared runs at a lower air temperature and many people find it more comfortable, so they use it more consistently.
Who should avoid infrared sauna sessions?
Anyone who is pregnant, has heart or blood-pressure problems, takes medication affecting fluid balance or sweating, or struggles to regulate body temperature should speak to a doctor first. Stop and leave if you feel dizzy or unwell.
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