Why Do I Feel Nauseous and Tired After Diving? (And How to Fix It)
Post-dive nausea and exhaustion are common during training. Dehydration from compressed air, nitrogen narcosis, and physical exertion are the culprits—and they're all preventable with the right prep.
Why Do I Feel Nauseous and Tired After Diving? (And How to Fix It)
Post-dive nausea and exhaustion are common during training. The main cause is dehydration—breathing compressed air removes moisture from your body 3–4 times faster than normal breathing, and many new divers don't hydrate enough beforehand. But there are other factors: nitrogen narcosis (the subtle "drunk" feeling underwater), adrenaline from learning new skills, and physical exertion all compound fatigue. Your body is also processing pressure changes and unfamiliar sensations.
The good news is these symptoms are entirely preventable with the right prep. Most experienced divers manage post-dive fatigue by starting hydration before they enter the water, eating solid food 2+ hours before training, and taking surface intervals seriously. If you're hitting the water already dehydrated, breathing dry air for 30–45 minutes, and then immediately doing another dive, your system has no chance to recover. The fix is straightforward: start hydrating 24 hours before training, not the morning of. Eat real food, take your time between dives, and listen to your body.
Why Does Breathing Compressed Air Cause Dehydration?
Compressed air is extremely dry. When air is compressed and stored in a tank, moisture is stripped out during the compression and filtration process. When you breathe this dry air underwater, it pulls moisture directly from your respiratory tract and deeper into your lungs. Your body compensates by drawing water from your bloodstream to humidify the air before it reaches your lungs—and you lose fluids much faster than on land.
Studies show divers lose 1–1.5 litres of fluid over a single 40-minute dive, which explains why some people feel completely wrung out afterward. New divers often don't realise they're dehydrated because they're underwater—there's no thirst signal. You come up, feel fine for 10 minutes, then hit a wall of nausea and exhaustion. The lag is the problem: by then you've already lost significant fluids, and your body is playing catch-up.
What Role Does Nitrogen Narcosis Play?
Nitrogen narcosis is the subtle "narked" feeling—a mild euphoria or mental fog that happens as nitrogen dissolves into your nervous system under pressure. It's not dangerous in recreational depths (down to 40 metres), but it contributes to mental and physical fatigue. Your brain is working harder to process information, maintain focus, and manage your buoyancy underwater, and after a dive, that effort catches up with you.
Combine narcosis with adrenaline—from concentrating on new skills, equalising, managing air consumption—and your nervous system is genuinely exhausted, not just your muscles. This is why Day 2 often feels worse than Day 1: your body hasn't fully recovered from the neurological load, and you're pushing it again before you've bounced back.
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