Summer is a great time to use Infrared Saunas

By Camille Pierson

Why the warmest months of the year are actually the perfect moment to turn up the heat and let your body truly cleanse.

There is a common assumption that saunas belong in winter, tucked into the tail end of a cold, grey day. But if you want to get the most out of your infrared sauna sessions, summer might just be the season to go all in. When the temperature outside rises and your body is already primed to sweat, infrared heat can work with your physiology rather than against it, making the entire detox process faster, deeper, and more effective.

Why infrared is different

Unlike traditional saunas that heat the air around you, infrared saunas use light waves to penetrate directly into your body’s tissues, raising your core temperature from the inside out. This means your body reaches its optimal sweating point more efficiently, and at a lower ambient temperature, typically between 45 and 65 degrees Celsius rather than the 80-plus you would find in a Finnish-style steam room. The result is a longer, more comfortable session with a far greater volume of sweat produced.

“Sweat produced in an infrared sauna contains a higher concentration of toxins than ordinary sweat, including heavy metals, BPA, and certain environmental pollutants.”

That richer sweat composition is the foundation of why so many wellness practitioners recommend infrared therapy as part of a regular detox routine. Your skin is your largest organ, and giving it the right conditions to excrete what the liver and kidneys cannot always handle alone is a genuine support to the body’s natural cleansing systems.

The summer advantage

In summer, your body is already acclimatised to warmth. Your sweat glands are more active, your circulation is more responsive, and your skin is more hydrated from the season’s natural humidity. All of this means that when you step into an infrared sauna, your body reaches its full sweating capacity more quickly than it would on a cold January afternoon.

Think of it like a warm engine versus a cold one. In winter, your body uses a portion of the infrared heat just to raise your baseline core temperature before any detox benefit begins. In summer, you arrive at the session already warm, so the process starts almost immediately. Sessions that might take 30 minutes to reach peak effect in winter can deliver the same output in 20 minutes during the hotter months.

There is also a motivational layer worth considering. Summer tends to bring with it a natural desire to feel lighter and cleaner. Social commitments, holidays, and more skin-baring moments create an incentive to feel your best. Pairing that mindset with a consistent sauna routine amplifies the commitment to hydration, clean eating, and rest that proper detoxing requires.

What detox actually looks like

The word detox carries a lot of weight in wellness circles, and it is worth being precise about what infrared saunas genuinely support. The liver and kidneys are your primary detox organs, handling the breakdown and excretion of waste products. What sweating does is provide an additional pathway, particularly for compounds that accumulate in fat tissue and are not easily cleared by the kidneys alone.

Regular infrared sessions, three to four times per week, have been associated in peer-reviewed research with reduced levels of certain heavy metals in sweat, improvements in cardiovascular function, and a reduction in inflammatory markers. These are real, measurable outcomes, and summer conditions make the frequency and effectiveness of those sessions more achievable for most people.

Tips for getting the most out of summer sessions

Hydrate before and after

Drink 500ml of water before your session and replenish with electrolytes after, especially in summer heat.

Keep a consistent schedule

Three to four sessions per week delivers more benefit than sporadic longer ones. Consistency is the key.

Pair with clean eating

Reducing processed food and alcohol during a sauna detox period allows the body to focus its energy on excretion, not digestion.

Book your next Infrared Sauna session at Float Spa.

About the Author:

Camille Pierson
Camille is the managing director of the Float Spa and a Trustee of the Brighton Yoga Foundation. She’s immensely proud of the community she’s built at the float spa and takes real pleasure from seeing yoga & floating transform people’s lives. She’s also a mother of two.

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