Breathing Exercises for a Panic Attack (Do These in Order)
A panic attack hijacks your body before your mind can catch up — pounding heart, tight chest, the sense that something is badly wrong. It isn't, and it will pass. These breathing exercises can shorten it. Do them in order.
What's happening in your body
During a panic attack your nervous system flips into fight-or-flight. Your breathing speeds up and turns shallow, you blow off too much carbon dioxide, and that chemical shift produces the dizziness, tingling and air-hunger that make panic feel even worse. The way out is to slow the breath — especially the exhale — and let carbon dioxide rebuild.
1. The physiological sigh (do this first)
It's the fastest-acting technique there is, and it needs no counting.
- Inhale through your nose until your lungs feel nearly full.
- Add a short second inhale on top, to fully inflate.
- Exhale slowly and completely through your mouth.
- Repeat one to three times.
Most people feel the first drop in intensity within about a minute.
2. Extended exhale breathing
Once the first spike eases, keep the calm going by making every out-breath longer than the in-breath.
- Inhale through your nose for four seconds.
- Exhale through your mouth for six to eight seconds.
- Repeat for a minute or two.
3. Box breathing to steady out
When you're past the peak, box breathing gives your mind something simple and rhythmic to hold onto: inhale four, hold four, exhale four, hold four, and repeat.
A few things that help
- Sit or lean against something — you don't need to stand.
- Breathe out through your mouth as if gently blowing out a candle.
- Don't fight the feelings; you're only slowing the breath, not forcing calm.
- If panic attacks happen often, talk to a doctor — breathing helps in the moment, support helps long term.
Need it right now? Open the quick-start page: Breathing exercise for a panic attack.