You’ve been waking up soaked. Not just slightly damp, but soaked, changing your shirt, maybe flipping your pillow. And you can’t figure out why because nothing has obviously changed.
“Night sweats” gets typed into search engines millions of times a month by people asking exactly this question. The frustrating thing is that there are genuinely multiple different answers, and the right one depends on your specific situation. Here are the eight most real and common causes, with enough detail to help you figure out which one is yours.
Cause 1: Hot Sleep Environment (Most Common)
What it is: Your room is too warm, your mattress traps body heat, your bedding is too heavy, or some combination of all three. Your body sweats normally to regulate temperature. It just looks like a lot.
Likelihood: Very high. This is the cause that most people don’t consider because they assume their room is cool when it isn’t.
How to tell: Put a thermometer in your bedroom. If it reads above 68-70°F when you’re sleeping, that’s your answer. Also note whether you’re on memory foam (major heat trap) and whether your sheets are synthetic or high-thread-count sateen (also trap heat).
What to do: Drop the thermostat to 65-68°F. Switch to linen or percale cotton sheets. Replace your duvet with a lighter option. If you’re on memory foam, try a cooling mattress topper or consider a different mattress type.
Cause 2: Alcohol
What it is: Alcohol raises your body temperature via vasodilation. As your liver metabolizes it over the following hours, it produces acetaldehyde as a byproduct, which generates metabolic heat. Your body sweats to compensate, typically in the early morning hours when the metabolizing is happening.
Likelihood: High if you drink in the evenings. Very common and very underdiagnosed because there’s a time gap between the drinking and the sweating.
How to tell: Skip all evening alcohol for one week. If the night sweating resolves or significantly improves, alcohol was the cause.
What to do: Move your last drink to at least 3 hours before bed, or stop evening drinking. The more you drink, the more pronounced the sweating, but even 2-3 drinks can trigger it in people who are sensitive.
→ Night Sweats After Drinking: Why Alcohol Makes You Sweat in Your Sleep
Cause 3: Hormones and Menopause
What it is: Estrogen fluctuations destabilize the hypothalamus’s temperature regulation. The hypothalamus, which acts as your body’s thermostat, becomes hypersensitive to small temperature changes and triggers vasodilation and sweating in response to nothing more than minor fluctuations.
Likelihood: High for women in their 40s and 50s (and sometimes earlier). Also relevant for men with low testosterone, for anyone on hormone therapy, and for anyone with thyroid problems.
How to tell: Are you a woman in perimenopause or menopause? Do you also have hot flashes during the day? Are your periods irregular or absent? These point strongly to hormonal causes. A hormone panel (FSH, estradiol, LH) can confirm. For men, a testosterone test.
What to do: For menopause, hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is the most effective treatment. Non-hormonal options include certain antidepressants (paroxetine, venlafaxine) and gabapentin. Lifestyle adjustments and cooling products help manage symptoms.
→ Menopause Night Sweats: Why They Happen and What Actually Helps
Cause 4: Anxiety
What it is: The sympathetic nervous system (fight-or-flight) activates during sleep in response to stress, anxiety, or anxious dreams. This directly triggers eccrine and apocrine sweat glands. You don’t have to be consciously experiencing anxiety for this to happen.
Likelihood: Moderate to high, and often underrecognized because people don’t connect “I’m anxious” to “I’m waking up soaked at 3 a.m.”
How to tell: Do you carry significant stress? Do you have trouble unwinding before sleep? Do you have vivid, anxious, or stressful dreams? Do you wake from nightmares? Do you have other symptoms of anxiety (racing thoughts, tension, irritability)? These point toward anxiety as a driver.
What to do: Treating the anxiety is the most direct path: therapy (especially CBT), medication if appropriate, sleep hygiene improvements. Short-term, relaxation practices before bed (progressive muscle relaxation, breathing exercises) can reduce sympathetic nervous system activation. Cooling bedding manages the symptom while you work on the cause.
→ Night Sweats: Every Cause, Every Fix
Cause 5: Medications
What it is: Numerous medications list night sweats as a side effect, primarily because they affect the nervous system or hormonal pathways that regulate sweating.
Likelihood: Moderate. If you’re on any of the medications listed below and your night sweats started around when you started taking them, this is probably your answer.
The main culprits:
- SSRIs and SNRIs (antidepressants): among the most common drug causes of night sweats
- Tamoxifen (breast cancer hormone therapy)
- Steroids and corticosteroids
- Some blood pressure medications
- Diabetes medications (particularly if causing nocturnal hypoglycemia)
- Opioids
- Some prostate medications
What to do: Talk to your prescribing doctor. Don’t stop medications on your own, but do ask whether an alternative with fewer sweating side effects is available.
Cause 6: Hyperthyroidism
What it is: An overactive thyroid gland produces excess thyroid hormone, which raises your metabolic rate and body temperature. The result is heat intolerance and sweating at any time, including during sleep.
Likelihood: Moderate. Hyperthyroidism affects about 1% of the population, more commonly women. It’s a frequently missed diagnosis because the early symptoms are easy to attribute to other causes.
How to tell: Does sweating happen during the day as well? Do you feel warm when others are comfortable? Have you lost weight without trying? Do you have a rapid heartbeat, tremor, anxiety, or difficulty sleeping? Is your hair thinning? These are classic hyperthyroid symptoms alongside the sweating.
What to do: Get your thyroid checked. A TSH test is a standard part of most blood panels and will screen for thyroid problems. If hyperthyroid, treatment (medication, radioactive iodine, or surgery depending on cause) resolves the sweating.
Cause 7: Infections
What it is: Certain infections cause the body to run a chronic low-grade fever or trigger immune responses that include sweating, particularly during sleep.
Likelihood: Lower for most people, but worth knowing. The infections most classically associated with night sweats are tuberculosis, HIV, and bacterial endocarditis. COVID-19 and long COVID have more recently been added to this list.
How to tell: Do you have other symptoms alongside the sweating: persistent low-grade fever, significant fatigue, unexplained weight loss, chronic cough, swollen lymph nodes? Do you have risk factors for TB or HIV? This combination raises the index of suspicion.
What to do: See a doctor. A TB test, HIV test, complete blood count, and inflammatory markers are standard and inexpensive. Night sweats as the only symptom without any others and without risk factors are less likely to be infection-related, but if in doubt, get tested.
Cause 8: Sleep Apnea
What it is: Obstructive sleep apnea causes repeated episodes of oxygen reduction and brain arousal throughout the night. Each arousal activates the sympathetic nervous system, which triggers sweating. People with untreated sleep apnea often wake up sweating without understanding why.
Likelihood: Moderate, particularly in people who snore heavily, are overweight, or have been told they stop breathing during sleep.
How to tell: Do you snore? Do you wake up feeling unrefreshed even after a full night’s sleep? Has a partner told you that you stop breathing or gasp? Do you have morning headaches? These are classic sleep apnea symptoms.
What to do: A sleep study (polysomnography) can diagnose sleep apnea. Treatment with a CPAP machine typically resolves the sweating along with other symptoms.
The Quick Decision Tree
Use this to figure out where to start:
- Room above 68°F or heavy bedding? → Fix environment first
- Drink alcohol in the evenings? → Stop for a week and observe
- Woman in her 40s or 50s with other menopause symptoms? → Hormone panel and gynecologist
- Started new medication before sweats began? → Talk to prescribing doctor
- Significant stress or anxiety? → Anxiety likely contributing
- Also losing weight, running a fever, or have swollen nodes? → Doctor visit, promptly
- Heavy snorer, tired despite sleep? → Sleep apnea evaluation
- None of the above? → Thyroid panel and full blood workup
Most people find their answer in steps 1-4. If you’re in step 6 with unexplained weight loss and fever, don’t wait.
→ Waking Up Sweating: Why It Happens and What It Means
Sources
- Night Sweats, Mayo Clinic
- Night Sweats, NHS
- Prevalence and etiology of night sweats in primary care patients, NCBI PMC
- Hyperhidrosis: Overview, DermNet NZ