Cryotherapy vs Ice Bath: Which Works Better?
Cryogenic chamber at -130°C vs cold water immersion: efficacy, cost and when to use each one
LongevityMap verdict
For maximum hormonal response (norepinephrine, dopamine): ice bath wins, because it also submerges the head and neck. For comfort, speed and clinical accessibility: cryotherapy wins. Both activate the adrenergic axis differently and are complementary.
Head-to-head comparison
Cryotherapy (WBC)
40–90 € / session
Ideal for:
Athletic recovery, inflammation, clinical accessibility
Advantages
- Temperature of -110°C to -196°C: maximum sympathetic activation in 2–3 min
- No wet clothes or drying off needed afterwards
- Shorter and more comfortable session than an ice bath
- Available at clinics with professional supervision
- Lower hypothermia risk due to limited duration
Disadvantages
- Head and neck outside the nitrogen: slightly lower norepinephrine response
- Requires travelling to a clinic (50–90 € per session)
- Does not produce deep systemic hypothermia like an ice bath
- Less accessible in areas without cryotherapy clinics
Ice Bath (Cold Plunge)
0–25 € / session (at home or sports centre)
Ideal for:
Maximum hormonal response, mental resilience, zero cost
Advantages
- Full immersion including head: greater norepinephrine and dopamine release
- Can be done at home with a bathtub and ice (minimal cost)
- Activates the vagus nerve and improves stress tolerance
- Greater documented antidepressant effect than air cryotherapy
- Demonstrable progressive physiological adaptation (perceived temperature drops week by week)
Disadvantages
- Very uncomfortable: requires mental tolerance that many fail to develop
- Risk of vagal shock or hypothermia if prolonged without supervision
- Water at 10°C penetrates deeper into tissues: may worsen acute muscle injuries
- Logistics: requires a large bathtub, ice and temperature monitoring
Summary table
| Feature | Cryotherapy (WBC) | Ice Bath (Cold Plunge) |
|---|---|---|
| Price | 40–90 € / session | 0–25 € / session (at home or sports centre) |
| Invasiveness | Non-invasive | Non-invasive |
| Sessions | 3–5 / week (2–3 min) | 3–5 / week (2–10 min at 10–15°C) |
| Efficacy | 82/100 | 86/100 |
| Safety | 95/100 | 82/100 |
| Value € | 70/100 | 95/100 |
| Recovery | 88/100 | 83/100 |
When to choose each option
You want to recover from intense training quickly and comfortably without risks.
You have cardiovascular issues and need medical supervision during the session.
You seek maximum hormonal effect (norepinephrine, dopamine) for mental wellbeing and cognitive clarity.
You want to practise it daily at home at no additional cost.
Frequently asked questions
Which activates more norepinephrine, cryotherapy or ice bath?▾
Can I do an ice bath at home without a special tub?▾
How often should you do cryotherapy or ice baths?▾
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