How to Hold Your Breath Longer: Freediving Techniques That Work
Nicola Lacey · 28 May 2019
A longer breath-hold is not about lung power. It is about relaxation, efficiency, and training your body to tolerate carbon dioxide. In this article I explain the real mechanisms behind breath-holding and the techniques freedivers use to extend their time safely.
What actually limits your breath-hold
That urge to breathe is not your body running out of oxygen. It is a response to rising carbon dioxide. The more relaxed you are, the slower you produce CO2 and the slower you use oxygen, so the longer and more comfortable your hold. This is why a calm mind matters more than a big chest.
Relaxation comes first
Before any breath-hold, freedivers spend time slowing the breath and releasing tension. A few minutes of slow, gentle breathing lowers your heart rate and calms your nervous system. When you finally hold, your body is already in a low-demand state. Rushing into a breath-hold while tense is the fastest way to a short, uncomfortable one.
CO2 and O2 tables
Freedivers train tolerance with two kinds of dry exercises:
- CO2 tables: repeated holds with shorter and shorter rests, training your body to tolerate the urge to breathe.
- O2 tables: repeated holds that get progressively longer, training your body to function with less oxygen.
These are done dry, on land, never in water alone. Done a few times a week, they build noticeable tolerance over a month.
Never train breath-holds in water alone. This is the one rule that comes first, every time.
The safety rule that comes first
This is the most important part of the whole article. Breath-hold training in water must always be supervised by a trained buddy. Holding your breath alone in water is the single most dangerous thing in freediving. Dry training is safe to practise on your own. Wet training is not.
Putting it together
Relax deeply, breathe slowly, build tolerance gradually with dry tables, and stay patient. Used correctly, these techniques turn a stressful struggle into a calm, surprisingly long hold. If you want a structured progression and in-water coaching, a focused session with us is the fastest way to improve. Message us to get started, safely.
Nicola Lacey
Founder and Instructor Trainer at Orenda Freediving, Koh Tao.
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