Why Breathing Matters for Emotional Regulation

What Is Emotion Regulation?

Take our Emotional Intelligence Test

Find a therapist near me

Slow breathing can calm your nervous system and regulate emotions, and it's something you can control.

Practicing just five minutes a day could yield both immediate and lasting psychological and physical benefits.

Nasal breathing has been found to be especially beneficial for cardiovascular, respiratory, and immune health.

Slow, smooth breathing is a critical action you can take to voluntarily influence your autonomic nervous system (ANS)—the part of your nervous system that runs in the background, controlling things like your heartbeat, digestion, and blood pressure.

The Science: How Breathing Changes Your Body

The ANS has two main branches:

Sympathetic nervous system: Activates your “fight or flight” response, speeding up your body to handle stress. The sympathetic nervous system triggers the release of adrenaline, increases heart rate and blood pressure, and diverts blood flow to your muscles for quick action (triggering both "jitters" and a stomach ache!).

Parasympathetic nervous system: Promotes “rest and digest,” slowing things down so you can recover and heal. This lowers your heart rate and blood pressure, stimulates digestion, and supports immune and repair processes throughout the body.

Most of the time, these systems work automatically and outside of your conscious control. Smooth slow, smooth breathing is the one thing you can do to consciously shift your body into a state of calm and recovery.

Unlike your heartbeat or digestion, you can control your breath at will. This makes it a unique behavior to modulate systems that are usually out of reach of conscious control—like heart rate variability (HRV), the way your heart rate changes with each breath); blood pressure; and stress hormone release.

Smooth, slow breathing interventions can reliably reduce stress, anxiety, and depression (Laborde et al., 2022; Zaccaro et al., 2018).

Benefits are both immediate—even a single 5-minute session helps—and cumulative, meaning the more days you practice, the bigger the impact (You et al., 2021; Bentley et al., 2023).

A global study of 1.8 million HRV biofeedback sessions suggests that the most benefit of smooth slow breathing arises when you are in a state of HRV coherence (Balaji, et al, 2025). This means that your heart rhythms become smooth, regular, and sine wave-like, rather than jagged or erratic (picture your little heart cruising joyfully on a bicycle vs peddling hard and braking at the same time!).

HRV coherence occurs when your breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure rhythms synchronize. This synchronization is called “resonance” and is linked to optimal functioning of the autonomic nervous system, and greater long-term health outcomes.

The same study found that while six breaths per minute (0.1 Hz) is a common coherence rate, individuals had the highest coherence when they found their own comfortable rhythm near this rate. Importantly, when study subjects were focused on emotions indicating fulfillment (i.e. peace, joy, love) they experienced higher coherence and more stable HRV, while emotions focused on lack (i.e. fear, anger and grief) disrupt this stability.

The key takeaway: Let comfort and natural rhythm guide your pace, rather than forcing a preset rate, and turn your attention to the ways you are experiencing need fulfillment.

Steps for Establishing an Evidence-Based Breathing Practice

Find a comfortable, upright position. Sit upright, feet flat, hands in your lap. Make sure your abdomen is free to move so you use your diaphragm to get a full breath.

Set a timer. I advise starting with just five minutes.

Inhale gently through your nose. Do this for about five seconds, letting your belly expand naturally and at a pace that feels right.

Exhale slowly through your nose. Allow your body to relax as you exhale; see if you can match the length of your inhale (so about five seconds to start).

Repeat. Continue this, aiming for a pace of around six breaths per minute, until the timer goes off.

Notice how you feel. Pay attention to shifts in your body or mood. Allow yourself to notice and savor feelings of fulfillment of safety, joy and connection.

Practice regularly. Aim for once or twice a day. Consistency over a week or more amplifies the benefits.

What Is Emotion Regulation?

Take our Emotional Intelligence Test

Find a therapist near me

The Benefits of Slow, Smooth Breathing

Improved heart rate variability (HRV): Increases flexibility in your nervous system, a marker of resilience.

Better vagal tone: The vagus nerve is a key part of the parasympathetic nervous system. The more you practice smooth, slow breathing, the more the vagus nerve is responsive to supporting relaxation and recovery.

Increased interoceptive awareness: Heightens your ability to sense internal body signals, aiding emotional regulation. In other words, you may be better able to notice dysregulation higher upstream, when you have more options to respond thoughtfully.

Positive brain state: Shifts your brain into relaxed alertness—calm, yet focused.

How Often Do I Need to Practice Smooth, Slow Breathing for Benefits?

Research suggests that even a single five-minute session at about six breaths per minute can be as effective as longer sessions for increasing vagal tone and HRV (You et al., 2021). This makes the practice highly accessible—no need for lengthy routines.

Regular practice can lead to less stress, better mood, and improved heart health (Bentley et al., 2023; Balaji et al., 2025). The more you practice, the more the practice carries forward in your day-to-day life.

Over time, slow, smooth breathing is likely to become your body’s default rhythm—shaping how you respond to stress, recover from challenges, and even breathe unconsciously throughout the day. This effect is more than just cumulative: with repetition, your nervous system “learns” this pattern, making calm, regulated breathing your new baseline.

In at least one study, nasal breathing was found to be superior to mouth breathing for several reasons (Watso et al., 2023):

Enhances parasympathetic tone: In the study, nasal breathing led to more healthy, calming heart rhythms—as measured by producing higher HRV.

Boosts nitric oxide production: Nitric oxide helps relax and widen blood vessels, improving blood flow and lowering blood pressure; it also supports the immune system, and enhances transfer of oxygen from lungs into the bloodstream.

Optimizes airway resistance: Nose breathing creates gentle resistance that slows airflow, supporting efficient gas exchange and airway stability.

Improves diaphragmatic function: Breathing through the nose encourages deeper, diaphragmatic breaths to pull air in through a narrower airway rather than shallow chest breathing.

These mechanisms support cardiovascular, respiratory, and immune health. Nasal breathing acutely lowers diastolic blood pressure and increases parasympathetic activity, providing immediate cardiovascular benefits.

Smooth, Slow Breathing is Medicine!

Slow, diaphragmatic breathing is safe, free, and accessible anywhere. Its ability to quickly and powerfully affect your body and mind can make it a foundational tool for managing stress and emotions. So why not commit to a practice?

Balaji, S., Plonka, N., Atkinson, M., Muthu, M., Ragulskis, M., Vainoras, A., & McCraty, R. (2025). Heart rate variability biofeedback in a global study of the most common coherence frequencies and the impact of emotional states. Scientific Reports, 15(1), 3241. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-87729-7

Bentley, T. G. K., D’Andrea-Penna, G., Rakic, M., Arce, N., LaFaille, M., Berman, R., Cooley, K., & Sprimont, P. (2023). Breathing Practices for Stress and Anxiety Reduction: Conceptual Framework of Implementation Guidelines Based on a Systematic Review of the Published Literature. Brain Sciences, 13(12), 1612. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci13121612

Laborde, S., Allen, M. S., Borges, U., Dosseville, F., Hosang, T. J., Iskra, M., Mosley, E., Salvotti, C., Spolverato, L., Zammit, N., & Javelle, F. (2022). Effects of voluntary slow breathing on heart rate and heart rate variability: A systematic review and a meta-analysis. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 138, 104711.

You, M., Laborde, S., Zammit, N., Iskra, M., Borges, U., & Dosseville, F. (2021). Single Slow-Paced Breathing Session at Six Cycles per Minute: Investigation of Dose-Response Relationship on Cardiac Vagal Activity. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(23), 12478. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182312478

Watso, J. C., Cuba, J. N., Boutwell, S. L., Moss, J. E., Bowerfind, A. K., Fernandez, I. M., Cassette, J. M., May, A. M., & Kirk, K. F. (2023). Acute nasal breathing lowers diastolic blood pressure and increases parasympathetic contributions to heart rate variability in young adults. American Journal of Physiology. Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, 325(6), R797–R808. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00148.2023

Zaccaro, A., Piarulli, A., Laurino, M., Garbella, E., Menicucci, D., Neri, B., & Gemignani, A. (2018). How Breath-Control Can Change Your Life: A Systematic Review on Psycho-Physiological Correlates of Slow Breathing. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 12, 353. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2018.00353

There was a problem adding your email address. Please try again.

By submitting your information you agree to the Psychology Today Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy


© Psychology Today