The Best Time of Day for Sauna, Red Light, Vibration Plate
Dec 13, 2025
Why “Good Therapies” Sometimes Feel InconsistentModern wellness is very focused on what to do:
And here's something important to understand: Many of these tools work even when timing isn’t ideal , and people absolutely still see benefits. However - your biology doesn’t operate in a vacuum, and every single cell and organ system in your body has a circadian clock in front of it..... Which means: Nearly every system involved in metabolism and recovery - cortisol, melatonin, mitochondrial respiration, glucose handling, autonomic tone, body temperature - follows a circadian rhythm coordinated by the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and peripheral clocks throughout the body. So while poor timing doesn’t make a therapy “bad," better timing can make the same tool work more efficiently with your biology & nervous system. That’s the lens of this article.....(keep reading for all the science & practical application) CONTEST ends tonight: Celebrating my first full week on SUBSTACK…..Tonight I am gifting my Leptin Reset Program with Customized Macros to one of my free subscribers & my Bundle of All Courses - to one paid subscriber! (click here to subscribe and automatically be entered to win)β Still time to shop before Christmas: Updated gift guide - Gift Guide for Him & Regular Amazon Gift Guide for stocking stuffersβ π¨ Holiday sale is open now - Click here to save up to 60% . If you are a practitioner & want to sharpen your lens before the new year (and have a tax write off for your business) - Click here for the Leptin Master Plan & Check out the MyCircadianApp Practitioner Programβ
Foundational Science: Why Timing Changes the Magnitude, Not the Validity (in other words - don't let perfect be the enemy of good)Decades of circadian research consistently show:
When inputs line up with these rhythms, the signal is amplified. When they don’t, the signal isn’t erased - it’s just potentially less coherent. This is one reason why two people can use the same tool and report totally different outcomes. Core references: βPanda S. The Circadian Code (2018)β βBass & Lazar. Circadian time signatures of fitness and disease.Science,β βZhang et al. Circadian clock regulation of metabolism.Cell, 2014β βCzeisler et al. Circadian and sleep-dependent regulation of hormone release.JCEMβ βVibration Plates & Rebounders,βI have hyperlinked the exact brands that I personally use & recommend.βVibration therapy & Rebounding can both be beneficial at many times of day, especially for circulation, lymphatic movement, and muscle activation. What research shows WBV activates: • Muscle spindles • Sympathetic nervous system • Glucose uptake • Mitochondrial biogenesis pathways (AMPK, PGC-1α) Documented benefits include improvements in: • Insulin sensitivity • Neuromuscular signaling • Balance • Circulation Key reviews: • Rauch et al., Sports Med, 2010β • Olivares et al., Int J Mol Sci, 2022β • Lau et al., Diabetes Metab Res Revβ Circadian optimization for vibration and rebounding (not requirement): Because WBV & rebounding are both metabolically and neurologically activating, they tend to align best earlier in the day - morning to early afternoon when: • cortisol is naturally higher • sympathetic activation is appropriate • body temperature is rising For many people, using these tools late at night can: • increase catecholamines • delay melatonin onset • fragment sleep That doesn’t mean these tools “don't work, but it does mean that timing can change the outcome. Now - the nuance. Some people do find low-intensity vibration calming before bed. That doesn’t contradict the science, before ultimately - biology is state-dependent. For individuals who are chronically stressed, tense, inflamed, or sympathetically dominant, gentle vibration can act as a regulatory input, similar to massage or rocking. Same tool. Different nervous system. Different result. Another quick note: There’s a lot of online discussion claiming vibration “activates histamine” or “dysregulates the nervous system.” In reality, responses to vibration - like exercise, sauna, or cold - are state-dependent. People with mast cell disorders, severe histamine intolerance, or chronic inflammatory conditions may need to be more cautious with intensity and timing. That doesn’t make vibration harmful - it makes individual physiology relevant. Circadian-aligned is about matching the right stimulus to the right time of day for your biology. If you want my personal protocol - I will be expanding on that later today on Substack - (make sure you are subscribed)Bottom line - If you want to optimize these, move them earlier, but if you don't have time in the morning - just try to keep it couple hours away from bedtime. Exercise:One of the most helpful papers I’ve read on circadian timing is a 2019 Journal of Physiology study that mapped what’s called a phase–response curve for exercise. In plain English: it asked…If you do the same workout at different times of day, does it shift your internal clock earlier or later? Exercise is a time cue (a zeitgeber) - meaning it can act like a signal to your brain and body that says: this is when day happens. In this study, researchers had adults do 1 hour of moderate exercise at one set time each day for 3 days (they tested multiple times across the 24-hour day). Then they tracked melatonin timing using urinary aMT6s (a reliable metabolite marker used to estimate melatonin rhythm timing). Here’s the key takeaway: • Exercise between ~7:00pm -10:00 pm tended to create larger phase delays (shifting the clock later) • Exercise around ~7:00 am and ~1:00 - 4:00 pm tended to create larger phase advances (shifting the clock earlier & providing better sleep outcomes) • Certain windows had minimal shifting & better sleep outcomes, suggesting timing matters if you’re trying to protect sleep/circadian rhythm What that means for you: If someone already struggles with “tired but wired,” insomnia, or delayed sleep… a hard workout in the evening can potentially nudge their clock later. And if someone is trying to strengthen circadian rhythm, improve morning energy, or stabilize sleep timing, morning or early afternoon training tends to be the safest bet from a circadian perspective. Important: this isn’t about being perfect.....working out & getting movement is almost always better than not. Plenty of people exercise at night and do fine, and sometimes evening workouts are the only time life allows - AND the benefit of movement still matters. This is just the “mitochondria + circadian biology” lens: timing can change the outcome of sleep & recovery. Important nuance: Fasted morning workouts can backfire if you are already under a lot of stress, and I always recommend hydrating & eating 15g of protein + fat to stabilize blood sugar. It's really not ideal to exercise before sunrise, but if that's the only time you have - I prefer mornings over evenings & recommend yellow blue blockers & covering your skin if under blue light (and then getting real sunlight and a more substantial breakfast when you are done). Red Light Therapy (Photobiomodulation)Photobiomodulation (PBM) is one of the most researched therapies in modern medicine, with over 10,000 peer-reviewed papers. βClick here for my panel & I have also been LOVING this light (it's full of some beautiful red & infrared - use code SARAHK) It influences: • Cytochrome-c-oxidase • ATP production • Nitric oxide signaling • Inflammatory pathways Foundational researchers: βHamblin MRβ βKaru TIβ βDr. Glenn Jeffery’s work suggests morning red/NIR light may pack a very powerful punch: • Improving mitochondrial efficiency • Supporting retinal-brain signaling • Strengthening circadian entrainment But here’s the key point: βPBM can support sleep in some contexts and disrupt it in others, and there are actually some studies that show sleep improvement when done close to bedtime. Timing, wavelength, dose, and individual sensitivity all matter, and I think we go back to the point I made about vibration therapy again: biology is state-dependent. Morning or early day is generally the least disruptive & shows immense benefits for the mitochondria & eyesight (my personal favorite is right after sunrise). Evening use isn’t “wrong” - it’s just more individual-dependent, and it's important to see how it impacts your sleep. I'll talk more about my personal red light therapy tolerance (and why I have seen many people unable to tolerate it) - over on substack. Cold TherapyβClick here to get 40% off my cold therapy courseβ Cold exposure: • Activates sympathetic tone • Increases norepinephrine • Improves insulin sensitivity • Enhances mitochondrial uncoupling Key research: βTipton et al., J Physiolβ βHanssen et al., Diabetesβ β Late-night cold can increase alertness and delay sleep - especially in wired-tired phenotypes. I will be expanding on how I use cold therapy strategically (and give my cold therapy protocol) over on substack - as I am an H2 haplotype living on the 33rd latitude, and my mitochondria weren't necessarily meant to live this far south. SaunaβClick here for my sauna & save up to $2,200 with code SARAHKβ Heat exposure increases: • Heat shock proteins • Growth hormone • Cardiovascular conditioning Strong evidence: βLaukkanen et al., JAMA Internal Medicineβ Most optimal circadian window: Afternoon to early evening. Why? Body temperature is naturally rising and peaks late afternoon Your core body temperature follows a circadian rhythm:
Sauna adds heat stress, and doing it while temperature is already rising or near peak means:
Doing sauna too late at night fights the required temperature drop needed for sleep, and Melatonin depends on the cool-down. Now - sauna itself does not raise melatonin, but what helps melatonin:
Early afternoon/evening sauna allows:
Late-night sauna:
The sweet spot (for most people)1–6 pm, with an ideal target around 3–5 pm If sauna is your only option at night:
And if you can only do sauna in the morning - wait until after you have seen sunrise & been outside to reinforce your natural rhythm (remember: Temperature is a zeitgeber). Hydrogen (Inhalation or Water)βClick here for the hydrogen therapy I use (use code SARAHK for their holiday sale) Hydrogen acts as a signaling molecule, not a blanket antioxidant. There are over 2,000 studies on therapeutic hydrogen showing it can: • Modulate inflammation • Influence redox signaling • Affect autonomic balance Key reviews: βOhsawa et al., Nature Medicineβ βIchihara et al., Medical Gas Researchβ Circadian nuance: βHydrogen water tends to be gentler and more flexible with timing, while inhalation is more timing-sensitive. Something important to understand is that hydrogen doesn’t push the body toward sleep or energy - it supports redox normalization, and your circadian biology decides what that feels like in the moment. βHydrogen doesn’t act like a stimulant or a sedative - it acts as a redox signaling molecule. That means it doesn’t force the nervous system in one direction. It helps normalize mitochondrial and autonomic signaling, and your circadian state determines how that feels. For most people, the most reliable window is late morning to early afternoon for inhalation (which acts quickly and systemically). Cortisol is naturally declining but still present, mitochondrial electron flow is high, and any energizing effect supports daytime physiology rather than interfering with sleep. Some people feel calmer using hydrogen inhalation in the evening, particularly if nighttime cortisol is elevated and they feel “tired but wired.” Others feel more alert or even wired - not because hydrogen is stimulating, but because improving redox efficiency can increase alertness when circadian rhythms are already flattened. My personal use: I will be giving my family's personal protocols & my protocol over on Substack - so make sure you are subscribed! Magnesium baths:βClick here for the magnesium soak I useβ A magnesium bath can be great before bed when it supports the natural drop in core body temperature that triggers sleep. The key is keeping the water warm, not excessively hot. Excessive heat too close to bedtime can delay cooling and interfere with melatonin signaling, while a warm bath followed by a cool-down can enhance relaxation, parasympathetic tone, and sleep onset. Science note: Sleep onset is driven by a decline in core body temperature and parasympathetic dominance, not heat itself. Grounding:(Grounding to the earth is always best - but this is the company I trust for grounding tools)β Grounding works differently, as it’s helpful at any time of day by supporting circadian regulation rather than pushing stimulation or sedation. By improving electrical balance and reducing excess sympathetic charge, grounding reinforces rhythmic signaling between the nervous system, the earth, and the circadian clock - making it one of the most universally tolerated tools across phenotypes and seasons. Science note: Direct contact with the Earth can influence autonomic balance and circadian stability via electrical charge transfer. Final Takeaway: Circadian-aligned therapy is not about doing everything perfectly It’s about:
Many tools work regardless, but some really do work better with timing. I hope you found this helpful & informative (and not too overwhelming)! Everything above is the reasoning behind how I approach these tools for myself & with clients: βOn Substack, I'll share how I actually apply this lens in real life - including my personal protocols for vibration, rebounding, exercise, red light therapy, cold exposure, sauna, hydrogen (inhalation and water for me & the family), magnesium baths, and grounding. And if you love this sort of information, and want to apply it in your personal practice - click here for The Leptin Master Plan - specifically for advanced learners & practitioners.
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In Healthπ, Sarah |
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β PS - This blog is not medical advice nor a substitute for 1:1 care with a trusted practitioner! |
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