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Night Sweats in Men: Causes, Solutions and When to See a Doctor

If you are a man waking up in the middle of the night drenched in sweat, you might feel like you are the only one dealing with it. You are not. Night sweats in men are extremely common, yet almost every article on the subject focuses on menopause, leaving millions of men without useful information about why they are sweating and what they can do about it.

Research shows that night sweats peak in prevalence between the ages of 41 and 55 for both men and women, but men are far less likely to discuss the problem with their doctor. In one study, only 12% of patients who experienced night sweats had reported the symptom to their physician without being specifically asked about it.

Man sitting on the edge of a bed looking exhausted from sleep deprivation and night sweats.

The causes of night sweats in men range from the straightforward (too much alcohol, stress, the wrong bedding) to the medical (low testosterone, medication side effects, underlying health conditions). This guide covers all of them, along with practical steps you can take tonight to start sleeping better.

Why Do Men Get Night Sweats?

Night sweats happen when your body's temperature regulation system is triggered to produce sweat even though you do not actually need to cool down. This system is controlled by the hypothalamus, a part of your brain that acts like an internal thermostat. When something disrupts the hypothalamus, whether it is hormonal changes, chemical substances, illness, or emotional stress, you sweat.

An infographic detailing the various medical and lifestyle causes of night sweats in men.

In men, the most common causes are low testosterone, alcohol, stress, medications, and infections. Less commonly, night sweats can be linked to conditions like sleep apnoea, diabetes, or thyroid problems. Let us go through each one.

Low Testosterone and Night Sweats

Testosterone plays a direct role in how your body regulates temperature. When testosterone levels drop, the hypothalamus can become more sensitive to minor temperature changes and trigger sweating in response to shifts that it would normally ignore.

Testosterone naturally begins to decline in men from around the age of 30, dropping by roughly 1% to 2% per year. By age 45, approximately 40% of men have testosterone levels below the normal range. By 70, that figure rises to around 70%.

A man over 40 sleeping restlessly due to night sweats.

By the time you reach your 40s or 50s, the decline can be significant enough to cause symptoms, and night sweats are one of the early ones. Other signs of low testosterone include fatigue, low mood, reduced sex drive, difficulty concentrating, and increased body fat.

If you are over 40 and experiencing regular night sweats alongside any of these other symptoms, it is worth asking your GP for a testosterone blood test. Low testosterone is treatable, and addressing it often resolves the night sweats along with the other symptoms.

It is also worth knowing that certain lifestyle factors can accelerate testosterone decline. Poor sleep (ironic, given the sweating), excessive alcohol consumption, obesity, chronic stress, and lack of exercise all contribute to lower testosterone levels. Addressing these factors can help even before you get to the medical options.

Night Sweats, Alcohol and Diet

Alcohol is one of the most common and most overlooked causes of night sweats in men. It does not matter whether you are drinking beer, wine, or spirits. Alcohol causes your blood vessels to dilate, which makes you feel warm initially. Your body then tries to cool down by sweating. On top of that, alcohol disrupts your normal thermoregulation and interferes with blood sugar levels during the night, both of which can trigger further sweating.

You do not need to be drinking heavily for this to happen. Even a couple of pints in the evening can be enough to cause noticeable sweating at night, particularly as you get older and your body becomes less efficient at processing alcohol.

Spicy food and caffeine can also contribute. Both raise your core body temperature, and consuming them within two to three hours of bedtime can increase the likelihood of sweating during the night.

We cover the alcohol connection in full detail in our guide to night sweats after drinking.

Medications That Cause Night Sweats in Men

A number of commonly prescribed medications can cause night sweats as a side effect. If your night sweats started around the same time you began a new medication, or had a dosage change, the medication is a likely culprit.

The most common offenders include antidepressants (particularly SSRIs like sertraline, fluoxetine, and citalopram), blood pressure medications, diabetes drugs, steroids, and hormone treatments. Antidepressants are especially noteworthy because sweating is one of their most frequently reported side effects, affecting anywhere from 8% to 22% of users depending on the specific drug.

If you think your medication is causing night sweats, do not stop taking it without talking to your doctor. There are often alternative medications or dosage adjustments that can help. For a detailed look at specific medications, see our article on antidepressants and night sweats.

Stress, Anxiety and Night Sweats

Stress and anxiety activate your body's fight or flight response, which triggers the release of adrenaline and cortisol. These hormones increase your heart rate, raise your body temperature, and stimulate your sweat glands. During the day, you might notice stress sweat under your arms or on your palms. At night, the same mechanism can cause you to wake up drenched.

Work stress, financial worries, relationship problems, and even just the cumulative effect of daily pressures can all trigger night sweats. The frustrating part is that the sweating itself often causes more anxiety. You start worrying about whether you will sweat again, which raises your stress levels, which makes sweating more likely. It becomes a self reinforcing cycle.

Breaking that cycle usually involves addressing the anxiety rather than just the sweating. A proper evening wind down routine, regular exercise during the day, limiting screen time before bed, and in some cases speaking to a therapist or your GP can all help. Our full guide on night sweats and anxiety covers practical strategies for breaking the cycle.

Sleep Apnoea

Sleep apnoea is a condition where you repeatedly stop breathing for short periods during the night. Each time your breathing stops, your body enters a brief fight or flight state to restart it, and this triggers sweating. Studies have shown that people with untreated sleep apnoea report night sweats about three times more often than the general population.

Sleep apnoea affects around 4% of men compared with 2% of women, and the rate is significantly higher in those who are overweight. An Icelandic study found that people with untreated sleep apnoea were three times more likely to report frequent night sweats (31%) compared with the general population (11%). Sleep apnoea is more common in men, particularly those who are overweight, smoke, or drink alcohol regularly. If you snore heavily, wake up feeling unrested despite getting enough hours of sleep, experience daytime tiredness, or if your partner has noticed you gasping or stopping breathing during the night, it is worth speaking to your GP about a sleep study.

How to Stop Night Sweats in Men

While addressing the underlying cause is the most effective long term strategy, there are practical steps you can take right now to reduce the severity and frequency of your night sweats.

Get your bedroom temperature right. The optimal sleeping temperature is between 16 and 18 degrees Celsius. If your room is warmer than this, your body has to work harder to cool down, and that means more sweat. A fan can help with air circulation even if you do not want a window open.

Switch to breathable bedding. This makes a bigger difference than most people expect. Synthetic sheets and duvets trap heat and moisture against your skin, making sweating worse and creating a damp, uncomfortable sleeping environment. Natural materials like bamboo bedding and eucalyptus bedding are moisture wicking and breathable, which means they pull sweat away from your body and allow it to evaporate rather than pooling against your skin.

Reduce your alcohol intake. Especially in the two to three hours before bed. Even cutting back by one or two drinks can make a noticeable difference.

Stay hydrated during the day. Water helps your body regulate temperature. Dehydration can make night sweats worse because your body has less fluid available for efficient cooling.

Exercise regularly, but not right before bed. Regular physical activity helps regulate your body temperature and reduces stress, both of which can reduce night sweats. But intense exercise within two hours of bedtime can raise your core temperature and make sweating more likely.

Choose the right sleepwear. Loose fitting shorts and a t shirt in natural fabric, or just boxers, will serve you better than synthetic pyjamas. Avoid polyester and nylon entirely.

For a complete guide to practical strategies, see our article on how to stop night sweats.

What Happens to Your Sheets When You Sweat Every Night

This is the part most men do not think about until the problem becomes obvious, usually when their sheets start to smell or develop yellow stains.

A comparison showing the bacteria buildup on bedding caused by regular night sweats.

When you sweat into your bedding every night, you are creating a warm, damp environment that bacteria thrive in. Research has found that after just one week of use, sheets contain between 3 and 5 million colony forming units of bacteria per square inch. A pillowcase used for one week harbours roughly 17,000 times more bacteria than a toilet seat. The most common bacteria found were gram negative rods, which are associated with pneumonia and infections. The bacteria feed on the proteins and fatty acids in your sweat, and it is this bacterial activity that causes the smell. Sweat itself is actually almost odourless. The sour, vinegar like, or musty smell that builds up on sheets is entirely down to bacteria.

Beyond the smell, this bacterial buildup can also irritate your skin, contribute to breakouts on your back and chest, and generally make your bed feel unpleasant to get into.

The solution has two parts. First, wash your sheets at least once a week, and more often if you are sweating heavily every night. Second, maintain your bedding between washes. Every morning, pull your duvet back to let everything air out, and use a bedding hygiene spray to tackle the bacteria before they have a chance to multiply. It takes 30 seconds and makes a genuine difference to how your bed feels and smells at the end of the day.

A person incorporating a bedding hygiene spray into their morning routine to combat night sweat bacteria.

For more on washing frequency and between wash maintenance, see our guide on how often you should wash your sheets.

When Should Men Worry About Night Sweats?

The vast majority of night sweats in men have a straightforward explanation and are not a sign of anything serious. But there are some situations where you should see your GP.

Make an appointment if your night sweats are persistent and drenching (soaking through your clothes and sheets most nights), if they are accompanied by unexplained weight loss, if you have a persistent fever, if you have noticed any lumps or swelling particularly in your neck, armpits, or groin, or if you feel unusually fatigued.

Night sweats can occasionally be associated with more serious conditions. Lymphoma is the cancer most commonly linked to night sweats, and it can affect men of any age. Prostate cancer and kidney cancer can also cause night sweats in some cases. However, cancer is only one of many possible causes, and it is rarely the explanation. Your doctor will typically start with a blood test and a review of your medical history, and in most cases the cause turns out to be something far more manageable.

Do not let fear of a serious diagnosis stop you from getting checked out. Early assessment is always better than worrying in silence. For a full guide to red flags and what your doctor will check, see our article on when to worry about night sweats.

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Night Sweats: Causes, Solutions and How to Keep Your Bedding Fresh

Night sweats are far more common than most people realise. A study published in the Journal of Family Practice found that 41% of over 2,200 primary care patients reported experiencing night sweats within the previous month.

A systematic review of the research put the prevalence at between 10% and 41% depending on the population studied, with the highest rates occurring in people aged 41 to 55. Only 12% of those affected ever mentioned it to their doctor, which means millions of people are dealing with this silently.

Person sitting on a bed struggling with night sweats and damp bedding.

Waking up in the middle of the night drenched in sweat is one of the most uncomfortable sleep experiences there is. Your sheets are damp, your pillow feels wrong, and even after you cool down it takes ages to fall back to sleep.

If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. Research suggests that up to 40% of people visiting their GP report experiencing night sweats at some point, and the real number is likely higher because many people never mention it to their doctor.

Night sweats are different from simply being too warm in bed. Everyone gets a bit sweaty on a hot summer night or under a thick duvet, but true night sweats happen regardless of your bedroom temperature.

They are caused by internal factors, not external ones, and they can leave your clothes and bedding completely soaked. This guide covers everything you need to know about night sweats, from what causes them to how to manage them, and importantly, what to do about your bedding when sweating at night is a regular occurrence.

What Are Night Sweats?

Night sweats refer to repeated episodes of excessive sweating during sleep that are severe enough to soak through your nightclothes and sheets.

The key distinction is that night sweats are not caused by your sleeping environment. If your bedroom is too hot or your duvet is too thick, that is just overheating. Night sweats happen even when the room is cool and your bedding is light.

Your body temperature naturally dips during sleep as part of your circadian rhythm. Sweating is your body's way of regulating that temperature, controlled by a part of the brain called the hypothalamus.

When something disrupts this system, whether it is hormones, medication, illness, or stress, the hypothalamus can trigger sweating even when your body does not actually need to cool down.

Most people who experience night sweats find them uncomfortable and disruptive, but in the majority of cases they are not a sign of anything serious. That said, persistent night sweats that come with other symptoms should always be checked by a doctor.

Infographic showing various causes of night sweats including hormones, medications, stress, and sleep apnoea.

What Causes Night Sweats?

There is no single cause of night sweats. They can be triggered by a wide range of factors, and sometimes by a combination of several at once. Here are the most common reasons people sweat excessively at night.

Hormonal changes

Around 75% of women going through perimenopause and menopause experience hot flushes and night sweats, with approximately 30% experiencing severe symptoms. The SWAN study (Study of Women's Health Across the Nation), which followed over 3,300 women, found that vasomotor symptoms last an average of 7.4 years.

Women who started experiencing symptoms before their periods stopped had them for an average of 9 to 10 years as their oestrogen levels fluctuate. But hormonal night sweats are not limited to menopause. They also commonly occur during perimenopause, pregnancy, the postpartum period, and even before menstruation.

In men, declining testosterone levels can have a similar effect on thermoregulation, particularly from the age of 40 onwards. For a detailed look at how these work, see our guides on night sweats in women and menopause and night sweats in men.

Medications

A surprisingly long list of common medications can cause night sweats as a side effect. Antidepressants are among the most frequent culprits, with SSRIs like sertraline and fluoxetine affecting between 8% and 22% of users.

Other medications that can trigger sweating at night include blood pressure drugs, diabetes medications, steroids, hormone treatments, and even over the counter painkillers like ibuprofen. If you suspect your medication might be causing night sweats, never stop taking it without speaking to your GP first. We cover this in more detail in our article on antidepressants and night sweats.

Anxiety and stress

Stress activates your sympathetic nervous system, the fight or flight response, and this can trigger sweating during sleep just as easily as it does during a stressful moment in the day.

Anxiety and night sweats often create a vicious cycle: the anxiety causes the sweats, the sweats disrupt your sleep, and the disrupted sleep makes your anxiety worse. Read more in our article on night sweats and anxiety.

Alcohol

Even moderate drinking can cause night sweats. Alcohol causes your blood vessels to dilate, which initially makes you feel warm, and then your body overcompensates by sweating.

It also disrupts your normal temperature regulation and affects blood sugar levels, both of which can trigger sweating during sleep. Our guide on night sweats after drinking explains this in full.

Infections and illness

Bacterial and viral infections commonly cause night sweats as your body fights off the invader. This is most noticeable with the flu, where night sweats can be intense for several days.

Tuberculosis is historically associated with night sweats, though it is rare in the UK. Some ongoing infections can cause persistent sweating at night.

Low blood sugar

When blood sugar drops too low, your body releases adrenaline to bring it back up. That adrenaline surge can cause sweating, particularly at night.

This is especially common in people with diabetes, but can also affect anyone who goes to bed on an empty stomach or after heavy exercise. See our article on when to worry about night sweats for more on this.

Sleep apnoea

People with untreated sleep apnoea repeatedly stop breathing during the night. An Icelandic cohort study of 822 sleep apnoea patients found that 31% reported frequent nocturnal sweating, which was three times higher than the 11% rate in the general population.

The study also found that sweating decreased to general population levels once patients began successful treatment with positive airway pressure therapy. Each time, the body goes into a brief fight or flight state to restart breathing, and this can trigger sweating. If you snore heavily and wake up sweating, it is worth mentioning both symptoms to your doctor.

Postpartum hormonal shifts

New mothers frequently experience intense night sweats in the weeks after giving birth. This is caused by the dramatic drop in oestrogen and progesterone after delivery, combined with the body shedding excess fluid retained during pregnancy.

It typically resolves within a few weeks but can persist longer in women who are breastfeeding. We have a full guide on night sweats after pregnancy.

Night Sweats in Women

Women are disproportionately affected by night sweats, largely because of the hormonal changes that occur throughout their lives. Menstruation, pregnancy, perimenopause, and menopause all involve significant hormonal fluctuations that can disrupt the body's temperature regulation.

The most common trigger is menopause, where declining oestrogen levels cause the hypothalamus to become more sensitive to temperature changes. This leads to hot flushes during the day and drenching sweats at night.

But many women also experience night sweats in the days before their period, during early pregnancy, and while breastfeeding. Sweating around the neck and chest at night is particularly common in women going through hormonal changes, as the neck and chest area has a high concentration of sweat glands and blood vessels close to the skin surface.

For a complete breakdown of causes and solutions, read our full guide on night sweats in women and menopause. If you are looking for bedding specifically designed for menopausal night sweats, take a look at our bedding for the menopause collection.

A man over 40 experiencing night sweats in bed.

Night Sweats in Men

Night sweats in men are more common than most people realise. With over 13,000 monthly searches in the UK alone for terms related to male night sweats, it is clear that a lot of men are dealing with this problem.

Yet most of the content online focuses almost exclusively on menopause, leaving men without much useful information. Common causes of night sweats in men include low testosterone (which can begin declining from the mid 30s), alcohol consumption, stress, medications, infections, and sleep apnoea.

Low testosterone in particular can cause disrupted thermoregulation that leads to night sweats, and it is worth getting tested if you are a man over 40 experiencing regular night sweats alongside fatigue or low mood. Our full guide on night sweats in men covers all the causes, practical solutions, and when to see your doctor.

A collection of remedies for night sweats, including a fan, water, and breathable bedding.

How to Stop Night Sweats

While the underlying cause of your night sweats will determine the most effective long term solution, there are practical steps that can help reduce their frequency and severity regardless of the cause.

Keep your bedroom cool. The ideal sleeping temperature is between 16 and 18 degrees Celsius. Use a fan, open a window, or adjust your thermostat. This will not cure night sweats caused by hormonal or medical factors, but it gives your body less work to do.

Watch what you eat and drink before bed. Alcohol, caffeine, and spicy food can all raise your core body temperature and trigger sweating. Try cutting these out for two to three hours before bedtime and see if it makes a difference.

Wear breathable sleepwear. Loose fitting pyjamas in natural fabrics like bamboo or cotton are far better than synthetic materials. Or if you prefer, sleeping with less on can help too.

Manage stress. If anxiety is contributing to your night sweats, establishing a proper wind down routine before bed can help. This might include putting your phone away an hour before sleep, doing some light reading, or practising breathing exercises. Our article on night sweats and anxiety goes into this in more detail.

Use a sleep mask that does not trap heat. If you use a sleep mask, make sure it is not making things worse. Synthetic sleep masks can make your face sweat. A silk sleep mask is naturally temperature regulating and breathable, so it blocks light without adding heat.

For a complete list of practical tips, see our full article on how to stop night sweats.

Keeping Your Bedding Fresh When You Sweat at Night

A visual comparison showing bacteria buildup on bedding over time due to night sweats.

This is the part that most night sweats articles ignore, and it is arguably the part that affects your daily comfort the most. When you sweat into your sheets every night, bacteria begin to multiply rapidly.

Your bedding becomes a warm, damp environment that is ideal for bacterial growth, and this happens much faster than it would for someone who does not sweat at night. A study by Amerisleep found that after just one week of use, pillowcases contain around 3 million colony forming units (CFUs) of bacteria per square inch.

That is roughly 17,000 times more bacteria than a toilet seat. By four weeks, that number climbs to nearly 12 million CFUs. The most common bacteria found were gram negative rods, which are associated with pneumonia and other infections. If you are sweating heavily, the buildup is even faster.

This bacteria is what causes your sheets to smell. Sweat itself is actually odourless. It is the bacteria feeding on your sweat that produces the unpleasant odours, whether that is a sour smell, a vinegar like smell, or just general staleness. We go into the science of this in our article on why your sheets smell.

The obvious solution is to wash your sheets more often, and we would recommend at least once a week as a minimum. But realistically, most people cannot strip and wash their bedding every day, especially new parents, busy professionals, or anyone who simply does not have the time or energy.

That is where a daily bedding routine comes in. Every morning, pull your duvet back to let your bedding air out. Open a window if you can. And use a bedding hygiene spray to tackle the bacteria that have built up overnight.

It takes about 30 seconds, it keeps your bedding fresh and hygienic between washes, and it makes a noticeable difference to how your bed feels and smells when you get back into it that night. Think of it like brushing your teeth. You would not skip brushing just because you are going to eat again tomorrow. Your bedding is something you press your face against for eight hours every night. It deserves the same daily attention.

Someone applying bedding hygiene spray to their pillow as part of a daily routine.

When Should You See a Doctor About Night Sweats?

Most night sweats are caused by benign factors like hormonal changes, stress, alcohol, or your sleep environment. But there are some situations where night sweats should prompt a visit to your GP.

You should make an appointment if your night sweats are persistent and drenching (soaking through your clothes and sheets regularly), if they are accompanied by unexplained weight loss, if you have a persistent fever or cough, if you notice any lumps or swelling, or if you feel unusually fatigued alongside the sweating.

Night sweats can occasionally be associated with more serious conditions including certain infections, thyroid problems, and in rare cases, some types of cancer such as lymphoma. However, it is important not to jump to conclusions. In the vast majority of cases, night sweats have a straightforward explanation and are very manageable.

For a full breakdown of what to look out for and what your doctor will check, read our guide on when you should worry about night sweats.

Living With Night Sweats

Night sweats can be frustrating, but for most people they are manageable with the right approach. The combination of addressing the root cause, optimising your sleep environment, choosing the right bedding materials, and maintaining a daily bedding hygiene routine can make an enormous difference.

If you are not sure where to start, here is a quick summary of the most useful resources we have put together:

How to Stop Night Sweats covers the practical steps you can take right now.

Best Bedding for Night Sweats helps you choose the right duvets, sheets, and pillows.

How Often Should You Wash Your Sheets? covers washing frequency and what to do between washes.

And if you want to explore our range of products designed to help people who sweat at night, take a look at our bamboo bedding, eucalyptus bedding, and silk sleep masks.

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