Next time you want cold therapy after a workout, skip the $60 session. Fill a cold bath or use an ice tub at 10-15°C for 10-15 minutes instead. One exception: skip cold entirely on lifting days — it blunts muscle growth. THE VERDICT ONE-LINER: Cold water outperforms cryotherapy chambers for recovery — at a fraction of the cost.
Think of how quickly a metal spoon conducts heat out of a hot drink compared to holding the mug near a hot oven. The spoon pulls heat away instantly through direct contact; the oven can be far hotter but without physical contact, heat transfer is slow. Your muscles work the same way — cold water is the spoon, cryotherapy air is the oven. More extreme temperature doesn't win. Direct contact does.
Are you paying $60 a session for something cold water does better?
Next time you want cold therapy, skip the $60 session. Fill a cold bath at 10-15°C and stay in for 10-15 minutes instead.
One exception: skip cold immersion entirely on days you lift weights — it blunts muscle growth regardless of which method you use.
The Verdict
Cold water outperforms cryotherapy chambers for recovery — at a fraction of the cost.
Think of how quickly a metal spoon conducts heat out of a hot drink compared to holding the mug near a hot oven. The spoon pulls heat away instantly through direct contact; the oven can be far hotter, but without physical contact, heat transfer is slow. Your muscles work the same way — cold water is the spoon, cryotherapy air is the oven. More extreme temperature doesn't win. Direct contact does.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
The Practical Takeaway
Use cold water immersion at 8-15°C for 10-15 minutes. Don't abbreviate — 2-3 minutes fails to achieve the deep tissue cooling needed to reduce next-day soreness.
If building muscle is your goal, avoid cold immersion immediately after resistance training. Direct evidence shows it shuts down the molecular signals your muscles use to grow — even if it makes you feel better in the short term. Separate cold therapy from lifting by several hours, or skip it on lifting days entirely.
The evidence does not support paying $40-$90 per session for WBC when cold water is available. Home CWI costs $800-$13,000 one-time with near-zero operating costs. Commercial WBC runs $4,000-$13,000 per year for the same or worse physiological outcome.
Conviction
A 12-week parallel-group RCT (N > 100) where post-resistance-training WBC (3 min, -130°C) preserved mTOR signaling and Type II fiber cross-sectional area equally to or better than CWI (15 min, 10°C), while providing equivalent DOMS reduction. That would justify the premium for physique athletes specifically.
A human RCT measuring cold shock protein (RBM3) expression, mitochondrial biogenesis markers, and adiponectin levels after matched WBC vs CWI protocols over 8+ weeks with relevant biomarkers at baseline and follow-up. Currently no such trial exists.
Go Deeper
Want evidence-scored answers to health questions like this one every week? Join The Verdict — free research reviews built on primary literature, not wellness blogs.
Join The Verdict — FreeSources
How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.
Is this worth your time, money, effort, risk, and trust for this goal? Different from Verdict Score (evidence strength) and Leverage Map (relative importance) — Action ROI is the worth-it call once friction is priced in.
Conviction-scored health research in your inbox. What works, what doesn't, and what the studies actually measured.
Subscribe freeConviction-scored verdicts on supplements, nutrition, training, physio, and recovery.