WHY BREATHING MATTERS DURING A PANIC ATTACK
A panic attack can feel overwhelming.
Your chest tightens.
Breathing speeds up.
Your body feels like it is losing control.
This is why breathing matters.
During a panic attack, your breathing often becomes:
- fast
- shallow
- irregular
- mouth-dominant
That pattern increases internal distress and keeps your nervous system in a heightened state.
When you change the breath, you begin changing the signal your body is receiving.
If you want the wider framework behind this:
→ Breathwork Explained: How to Use Your Breath to Control State, Energy and Performance
WHAT HAPPENS TO YOUR BREATHING DURING PANIC
Panic changes the rhythm of the body very quickly.
Instead of breathing in a calm and controlled way, the body tends to:
- over-breathe
- pull air into the upper chest
- shorten the exhale
- lose rhythm completely
This can create sensations such as:
- dizziness
- tingling
- chest tightness
- shortness of breath
- a feeling that something is seriously wrong
These sensations often make the panic worse.
For the broader anxiety mechanism:
→ How Breathing Controls Anxiety, Stress and Emotional State
If you want to understand why the breath destabilises under stress:
→ Why Your Breathing Gets Worse When You’re Anxious (And How to Fix It)
THE GOAL IS NOT BIG BREATHS
This is where many people go wrong.
They think the answer is to take huge deep breaths.
It usually is not.
Big, forceful breaths can make panic worse because they increase breathing volume and can intensify symptoms.
The real goal is:
- reduce effort
- slow the breath
- create rhythm
- lengthen the exhale
Think:
less, slower, softer
If you need the immediate version of this approach:
→ How to Stop Anxiety Fast Using Your Breath (Without Forcing It)
BREATHING EXERCISE 1 — EXTENDED EXHALE BREATHING
This is one of the most useful exercises during a panic attack.
How to do it
- breathe in gently through the nose
- keep the inhale smaller than normal
- breathe out longer and slower than you breathed in
- stay relaxed and avoid forcing
You are not trying to fill the lungs.
You are trying to reduce internal intensity.
Why it works
A longer exhale helps:
- reduce nervous system activation
- slow heart rate
- create a signal of safety
This is often the fastest entry point back into control.
For a more structured progression of this:
→ Slow Rhythmic Breathing
BREATHING EXERCISE 2 — RHYTHM RESTORATION
Panic thrives on irregular breathing.
One of the fastest ways to shift the state is to rebuild a simple rhythm.
Simple pattern
- inhale
- pause
- exhale
- pause
Keep the pattern light and comfortable.
Do not chase perfect numbers.
What matters is consistency.
Why it works
Rhythm gives the body something stable to follow.
When breathing becomes predictable, the system begins to settle.
If you want to build stronger overall regulation:
→ Control Your Nervous System With Breathing
BREATHING EXERCISE 3 — NASAL BREATHING RESET
Mouth breathing often increases panic symptoms.
Nasal breathing slows the process down.
How to do it
- close the mouth
- breathe quietly through the nose
- reduce the size of each breath
- soften the shoulders and jaw
Why it works
Nasal breathing helps:
- slow airflow
- improve control
- reduce over-breathing
- stabilise rhythm
If nasal breathing feels difficult or unfamiliar:
→ Breath Awareness & Technique
WHAT TO DO IN THE MOMENT
During a panic attack, keep it simple.
Do not try five different techniques.
Do this:
- close the mouth
- reduce breath size
- exhale more slowly
- restore a basic rhythm
- stay with it for several minutes
The body usually responds better to simplicity than complexity.
WHAT NOT TO DO
Avoid:
- gasping for air
- taking huge breaths
- forcing deep inhales
- trying advanced techniques
- panicking about the sensations themselves
These usually add more stress to the system.
The aim is not to overpower panic.
It is to stop feeding it.
HOW THIS CONNECTS TO RACING THOUGHTS
Panic and mental spiralling often happen together.
When breathing is unstable:
- thoughts speed up
- fear increases
- focus collapses
When breathing becomes slower and more rhythmic, the mind usually begins to follow.
If your thoughts race hard and fast:
→ How to Calm a Racing Mind with Breathing
If you get trapped in loops before or after panic:
→ Stop Overthinking With Breathing
HOW THIS AFFECTS SLEEP AND RECOVERY
Panic does not just affect the moment.
It often leaves the system elevated afterwards.
That can affect:
- sleep quality
- physical recovery
- next-day energy
- emotional stability
If panic or anxiety carries into the night:
→ Why Your Breathing Might Be Ruining Your Sleep (And How to Fix It)
→ Breathing Routines That Improve Recovery
BUILDING LONG-TERM RESILIENCE
Breathing exercises for panic attacks are useful in the moment.
But long-term change comes from training your baseline.
You want to build:
- slower natural breathing
- better rhythm
- stronger nervous system regulation
- reduced stress reactivity
Start here:
→ Where to Start With Breathwork (Without Getting Overwhelmed)
Then continue here:
→ How to Build a Daily Breathwork Routine That Actually Works
If you want guidance on choosing the right style of practice:
→ Choosing Your Practice
WHEN TO USE THESE EXERCISES
These exercises are useful for:
- panic attacks
- sudden anxiety spikes
- chest tightness from stress
- mental overwhelm
- post-panic recovery
FINAL WORD
Panic attacks feel powerful because they change the whole body at once.
But the breath gives you a direct point of influence.
You do not need to take bigger breaths.
You need to take better ones.
Softer.
Slower.
More controlled.
That is where the shift begins.
NEXT STEP
To build stronger breathing control over time:
→ Somatic Breathing
→ Fibona-Qi Breathing
→Popular Breathwork Tracks