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How to Do Box Breathing (4-4-4-4)

Box breathing is a simple pattern: inhale for four counts, hold for four, exhale for four, hold for four, then repeat. It takes about a minute to feel the effect, needs nothing but your own breath, and is documented in Navy and Air Force tactical-breathing training.

In short: breathe in for 4 counts, hold for 4, breathe out for 4, hold for 4 — that's one "box." Repeat for four to six rounds (about a minute) any time you need to steady your body quickly.


The steps

  1. Exhale fully. Breathe out completely through your mouth, emptying your lungs.
  2. Inhale for 4. Breathe in slowly through your nose for a count of four.
  3. Hold for 4. Hold the breath gently, without straining, for a count of four.
  4. Exhale for 4. Breathe out slowly through your mouth for a count of four.
  5. Hold for 4. Hold again with your lungs empty for a count of four.
  6. Repeat. Continue for four to six rounds — about a minute — or longer if it's helping.

When to use it

  • Right before a stressful conversation, presentation, or decision
  • The moment you notice your heart rate or breathing speed up
  • Between back-to-back high-pressure meetings, as a quick reset
  • Before sleep, if your body feels wired
  • Anywhere — a desk, a hallway, a car, a flight line

Why it works

Box breathing is a form of slow, paced breathing. Research on breathing at a similarly slow pace has found measurable increases in baroreflex sensitivity — the reflex the body uses to help stabilize heart rate — and in heart-rate variability, a marker of active self-regulation (Bernardi et al., Circulation, 2002).

The 4-4-4-4 pattern itself is documented in U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force training material as a way to help personnel regulate their breathing and stay focused under stress.

Sources: U.S. Navy, Combat Tactical Breathing (PDF) · U.S. Air Force Medical Service, "Ready, Set, Focus" · Bernardi et al., Circulation, 2002. Full citations on the science page.

Box breathing is a self-regulation skill, not a medical treatment. It isn't a cure or treatment for anxiety, PTSD, high blood pressure, or any other condition, and it isn't a substitute for professional care — talk to a qualified professional if you're struggling, or before starting a new breathing practice if you have a heart or breathing condition. PPR is an independent app; it is not affiliated with, or endorsed by, any air force.

Box breathing is close to the breath-and-body-scan focus trained in Step 1 of the PPR course, "Basic Awareness." Read more about the method →


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