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Sweaty Feet at Night: Causes and How to Wake Up Dry

Sweaty feet at night have specific causes that differ from daytime foot sweating. Here is what drives it, when it matters, and how to stay dry.

By sweat.sucks Editorial Team · 6 min read· Last reviewed March 17, 2026
Medically reviewed by Keala Nakamura, MD , Hawaii Medical Journal

You go to bed with dry feet and wake up to damp socks, wet sheets at the foot of the bed, or that uncomfortable clammy sensation. It is annoying in a way that seems minor but adds up over months of disrupted sleep and soggy bedding.

The good news is that sweaty feet at night are usually very fixable. The causes are often environmental, and a few targeted changes tend to help quickly. Here is how to think through it.


An Important Distinction First

Primary hyperhidrosis (the neurological condition that causes excessive sweating) is classically described as ceasing during sleep. If your excessive sweating is only happening at night, that does not quite fit the pattern of primary hyperhidrosis, and is worth noting.

What causes nocturnal foot sweating if not primary hyperhidrosis? A few different things, outlined below.

If you sweat heavily from your feet during the day AND at night, daytime plantar hyperhidrosis that continues at lower levels overnight is possible, even if it does not perfectly match the classic description. Everyone’s presentation is slightly different.


Causes of Sweaty Feet at Night

1. Overheating from Bedding or Environment

The most common cause. The feet are wrapped in socks, tucked under blankets, and surrounded by insulating material. If the room is warm or the bedding does not breathe, the feet heat up and sweat to cool down.

This is straightforward thermoregulation. The fix involves bedding and temperature, not medicine.

2. Body Temperature Regulation During Sleep

During normal sleep, core body temperature drops by about 1-2 degrees Fahrenheit. This cooling process involves peripheral blood vessels dilating, including in the hands and feet, to release heat. Increased blood flow plus an enclosed environment equals more warmth and more potential sweating.

This is normal physiology. For most people it does not produce noticeable sweating. For people who run warm, sleep hot, or have especially reactive sweat glands, it can result in noticeable foot dampness.

3. Plantar Hyperhidrosis (Running Into Night)

For people with significant daytime foot sweating, the sweating may continue at a lower level overnight rather than stopping completely. This is more likely if hyperhidrosis is more severe or if the sweat glands are particularly reactive.

4. Anxiety or Stress

Emotional sweating is driven by the brain’s stress response. If you go to bed anxious (about tomorrow, about finances, about anything), your sympathetic nervous system stays partially activated, and this can manifest as sweating, including in the feet.

Night sweating from anxiety tends to improve when the source of the anxiety is addressed or managed. Short-term it can be reduced with bedding changes and temperature control.

5. Medications

Certain medications cause sweating as a side effect, and this can manifest more noticeably at night simply because that is when you notice it:

  • Antidepressants (SSRIs and SNRIs particularly)
  • Opioids
  • Antipyretics (fever reducers like aspirin or acetaminophen, especially when used at night)
  • Some blood pressure medications

If sweating started or worsened when you began a new medication, that is worth noting and discussing with whoever prescribes it.

6. Medical Causes of Night Sweats

General night sweats (not just feet) can result from several medical conditions:

  • Menopause or perimenopause
  • Thyroid dysfunction
  • Infections (tuberculosis, HIV, endocarditis)
  • Lymphoma and other cancers
  • Diabetes and blood sugar fluctuations overnight
  • Hormonal disorders

If you are also sweating from your trunk, head, and neck at night, and it is severe enough to soak through clothes or sheets, that is more likely a general night sweats issue than a foot issue specifically, and warrants a conversation with your doctor.

Sweaty feet without other systemic night sweats is less likely to indicate a serious underlying condition.


What Actually Helps

Temperature and Environment

Start here, because it is free and often solves the problem:

  • Lower the room temperature. 65-68 degrees Fahrenheit is often cited as the sleep-optimal temperature range.
  • Switch to a lighter blanket or a blanket with better breathability. Down and cotton breathe better than most synthetic fills.
  • Use cotton or linen sheets rather than synthetic fabrics.
  • Try sleeping without socks and letting feet breathe under lighter bedding.

Socks (If You Want Them)

If cold feet are also a concern and you want socks:

  • Merino wool is the best choice for moisture management combined with warmth.
  • Moisture-wicking synthetic blends (polyester-nylon) are good for dryness but warm less.
  • Cotton retains moisture rather than wicking it, making cotton socks counterproductive for sweaty feet.

Foot Antiperspirant Applied at Night

This is the highest-yield practical intervention if the sweating is meaningful.

Applying a clinical-strength or prescription antiperspirant to the soles and between the toes before bed takes advantage of lower overnight sweat production. The aluminum has time to form effective plugs in the sweat ducts before any significant sweating occurs. Wash it off in the morning.

Apply only to completely dry feet. Wait 20-30 minutes after washing before applying.

This is the same principle as the standard nighttime antiperspirant protocol for armpits. It works for feet too.

Managing Odor from Overnight Sweating

Overnight sweating in an enclosed shoe or sock environment sets up conditions for bacterial and fungal growth. If foot odor is part of the picture:

  • Wash feet thoroughly, including between the toes, every morning
  • Dry between the toes after washing (moisture between toes creates ideal conditions for fungal growth)
  • Rotate shoes so they have 24-48 hours to dry between uses
  • Consider antifungal powder in shoes if athlete’s foot is a recurring issue

Why Do My Feet Smell Even After Washing?

For Significant Plantar Hyperhidrosis

If nighttime foot sweating is part of a larger pattern of excessive foot sweating that affects your daily life, iontophoresis is the most effective non-surgical treatment available for plantar hyperhidrosis. It has a 70-80%+ success rate for hands and feet and is worth knowing about if you are dealing with significant sweating rather than just mild overnight dampness.

Sweaty Feet: The Complete Guide


When to Talk to a Doctor

See a doctor if:

  • The nighttime sweating is severe enough to soak through sheets
  • You are also soaking through clothing from other areas (trunk, head, underarms) at night
  • The sweating started suddenly or has notably increased in severity recently
  • You have other symptoms: unexplained weight loss, fever, fatigue
  • The sweating is interfering significantly with sleep quality

Isolated foot dampness overnight in an otherwise healthy person is almost always benign. Drenching night sweats across the whole body warrant medical evaluation to rule out the conditions listed above.

Foot Antiperspirant: What Works and How to Apply It

Best Socks for Sweaty Feet

Sweaty Feet: Causes and Solutions

Sources

  1. Hyperhidrosis (StatPearls), NCBI Bookshelf / StatPearls
  2. Sweaty feet, NHS
  3. Hyperhidrosis, Cleveland Clinic
  4. Night sweats, Mayo Clinic

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it normal for feet to sweat at night?

Some moisture overnight is normal. Waking up with noticeably wet socks, damp sheets around the feet, or cold clammy feet is less normal and worth paying attention to. For most people it is a bedding, temperature, or mild sweating issue. Occasionally it points to a broader night sweats issue.

Can plantar hyperhidrosis cause sweating at night?

This is interesting. Primary hyperhidrosis is classically described as stopping during sleep, which is one of the diagnostic criteria. If you have foot sweating only at night, that pattern does not fit classic primary hyperhidrosis and is more likely related to body temperature, bedding, or secondary causes.

Why do my feet get so hot at night?

Feet radiate heat as part of the body's thermoregulation during sleep. This is actually important for sleep quality. But if the heat has nowhere to go because of thick socks, synthetic bedding, or hot room temperature, sweat is the result.

Does foot antiperspirant work if applied at night?

Yes. This is actually the best time to apply it. Prescription or clinical-strength foot antiperspirant applied to completely dry feet before bed, then washed off in the morning, is more effective than daytime application because sweat production is lower overnight, giving the product time to work.

What kind of socks help with sweaty feet at night?

Lightweight wool (merino) or moisture-wicking synthetic socks move moisture away from the skin better than cotton. Or skip socks entirely and focus on breathable bedding. The right choice depends on whether warmth or dryness is the priority.

Medical Disclaimer: The content on sweat.sucks is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider.