A single 10 minute NSDR session can measurably shift your brain from a stressed beta state to a calm alpha-theta state, replenishing dopamine reserves along the way. Here's the complete protocol: what to do minute by minute, why 10 minutes is the sweet spot, and when to use it for maximum effect.
TL;DR: the 10 minute NSDR protocol at a glance
- Lie down, close your eyes, and spend 2 minutes on long exhales (inhale 4 seconds, exhale 6-8 seconds)
- Scan your lower body from toes to hips, releasing tension at each point (minutes 2-4)
- Continue the scan from stomach to scalp, letting each area soften (minutes 4-7)
- Drop the scan and rest in open awareness for 2 minutes (minutes 7-9)
- Wiggle your fingers and toes, take a deep breath, and slowly open your eyes (minute 10)
- Sit up gradually. Give yourself 30 seconds before standing.
Why 10 minutes is the sweet spot
Most guides tell you NSDR sessions can last 10, 20, or 30 minutes and leave it at that. Here's what I found after reviewing the research: 10 minutes is the minimum effective dose for a real nervous system reset, and for most use cases, it's all you need.
Your brain on a 10-minute session
When you lie down and start a non-sleep deep rest protocol, your brain begins shifting out of beta waves (12-35 Hz, your normal waking state) into alpha waves (8-12 Hz, relaxed alertness) within the first few minutes. By minute 5-7, most people reach theta territory (4-8 Hz), the same brain state associated with the edge of sleep.
This is where the good stuff happens. Your parasympathetic nervous system takes over, heart rate drops, and your body switches from "fight or flight" to "rest and digest." A 2024 study by Boukhris et al. found that just a 10-minute NSDR intervention was enough to improve both cognitive and physical performance in active participants.
The dopamine replenishment window
Everyone cites the "65% dopamine increase" from NSDR without explaining what it actually means. The number comes from a 2002 PET scan study by Kjaer et al. that measured endogenous dopamine release in the ventral striatum during yoga nidra (the practice Andrew Huberman NSDR protocols are based on).
Here's the thing: this is not a dopamine spike like caffeine or social media. It's replenishment of baseline reserves. Huberman explains it using a wave pool analogy: "If we are going to feel motivated at all, we are going to have to have enough dopamine in the wave pool before we can generate any waves or peaks in dopamine." A 10 minute NSDR session fills the pool. It doesn't create a spike that crashes afterward.
Why shorter sessions fall short
I've seen people try 5-minute "NSDR" sessions and wonder why nothing happened. The issue is physiology: it takes roughly 2-3 minutes just to downregulate your breathing and shift out of beta. A 5-minute session barely gets you into alpha before it's over. You need those extra minutes in theta for the real benefits, the dopamine replenishment, the cortisol reduction, the parasympathetic activation.
A 2025 randomized controlled trial (Moszeik et al.) found that 11-minute daily yoga nidra sessions were enough to reduce salivary cortisol and improve measures of stress and anxiety. That's almost exactly the 10-minute window we're talking about.
The 10 minute NSDR protocol: minute by minute
Here is the protocol. I recommend using a guided NSDR track for your first few sessions so you can focus on following the cues rather than watching a timer.
Minutes 0-2: setup and breath regulation
Lie on your back. Bed, couch, yoga mat, or floor, it doesn't matter. Close your eyes.
Start with intentional long exhales: inhale through your nose for 4 seconds, exhale through your mouth (or nose) for 6-8 seconds. The extended exhale is the key here. It directly activates your parasympathetic nervous system by stimulating the vagus nerve. Don't force it. Let each exhale be slow and complete.
By the end of minute 2, your heart rate should have started to drop noticeably.
Minutes 2-4: body scan (lower body)
Shift your attention to your toes. Notice any tension, then consciously release it. Move up through your feet, ankles, calves, knees, thighs, and hips. Spend about 10-15 seconds per area.
The point of the body scan is not to "feel" something specific. It's to redirect your attention away from thoughts and into physical sensation. This is what makes NSDR different from a nap: you're staying aware but directing that awareness inward.
Minutes 4-7: body scan (upper body and deepening)
Continue from your stomach up through your chest, hands, arms, shoulders, neck, jaw, and scalp. This is typically where the session deepens. Your brain is shifting further into theta by now.
Let me be direct about this part: you might feel like you're falling asleep. That's fine. The boundary between deep NSDR and light sleep is thin, and both are beneficial. If you drift off for a minute, you haven't "failed." You've just given your nervous system what it needed.
Minutes 7-9: open awareness and stillness
Stop scanning. Let your attention rest wherever it wants to. You're not directing anything now, just being still. This is the deepest part of the session, where most of the restorative work happens.
Some people experience a feeling of floating or heaviness. Others feel nothing specific but notice their mind has quieted. Both are normal.
Minutes 9-10: gentle return
Start by wiggling your fingers and toes. Take one deep, full breath. Slowly open your eyes without looking at anything in particular. Give yourself 30 seconds before sitting up.
This transition matters more than people realize. Jolting up and immediately checking your phone undoes some of the regulation you just built. Take the extra 30 seconds.
Who 10 minute NSDR is built for
The NSDR protocol comes in different lengths for different needs. But I'd argue the 10-minute format is specifically ideal for three groups.
The afternoon slump reset
If your energy crashes between 1-3 PM, a 10 minute NSDR session is the single most efficient fix I've found. It's faster than a nap (which requires 20+ minutes plus groggy wake-up time) and more effective than caffeine (which borrows energy from tonight's sleep).
As Huberman puts it: "NSDR is a zero-cost tool. You can do it anytime, anywhere, for 10 minutes, and it will restore your sense of calm and ability to think clearly."
The pre-performance primer
Need to be sharp for a presentation, exam, or important conversation? A 10-minute session 15-30 minutes beforehand can help regulate your nervous system from anxious activation back to alert calm. This is the science of NSDR in practice: you're not trying to relax, you're trying to regulate.
The daily minimum dose
Here's what I've learned from reviewing the consistency research: daily practice, even short, beats occasional long sessions every time. If you can commit to 10 minutes a day, you're building the same neural pathways that produced results in the Moszeik cortisol study and the Basso attention study.
If 10 minutes daily sounds like a lot, start with 3 days per week. The data suggests that even bi-weekly sessions for 8 weeks can decrease stress and improve well-being.
When to use a 10 minute session (and when you need longer)
Not every situation calls for the same session length. Here's how I'd break it down.
Best times for a 10-minute reset
The best times to practice NSDR depend on what you're optimizing for, but the 10-minute format works especially well:
- After a focus block: 60-90 minutes of deep work depletes your cognitive reserves. A 10-minute NSDR session between blocks can restore them.
- Early afternoon: The post-lunch cortisol dip hits most people between 1-3 PM. This is where 10 minutes shines.
- Before learning something new: Research on neuroplasticity suggests that entering a calm, alert state before a learning session improves retention.
When 10 minutes is enough
For daily maintenance, energy restoration, and pre-task regulation, 10 minutes is sufficient. The mistake I see most often is people thinking they need a longer session to "get it right." You don't.
When to go longer
If you're dealing with significant sleep debt, processing a high-stress period, or using NSDR specifically for deep recovery, 20-30 minute sessions are worth the extra time. Check the full NSDR protocol guide for longer session structures.
Common mistakes that waste your 10 minutes
I've noticed most people who say "NSDR didn't work for me" are making one of three errors.
Trying too hard to relax
This is the most common one. If you're actively thinking "why am I not relaxed yet," you're keeping your sympathetic nervous system engaged. The fix: focus on the exhale, not the outcome. Your job is to follow the protocol. Relaxation is a side effect, not a goal.
Skipping the breath setup
Jumping straight into the body scan without the 2-minute breathing phase means your nervous system hasn't downshifted yet. Those long exhales aren't optional. They're the mechanism that triggers parasympathetic activation. Without them, the rest of the session stays shallow.
Checking the clock
Every time you open your eyes or check the timer, you pull yourself back to beta. Use a guided track or set a single quiet alarm for 10 minutes. Then forget about time entirely.
Start your 10 minute NSDR practice
When your nervous system is running hot, the goal is regulation first. A 10 minute NSDR session is one of the fastest, most practical tools to get there, and you don't need experience, equipment, or a quiet room to start.
- Free NSDR tracks for quick resets
- Guided protocols designed around the 10-minute format
- Sessions for focus, recovery, and sleep onset
Start a free NSDR track and try the 10-minute protocol today. If it works, build it into your daily schedule. That's the whole play.
Frequently asked questions
Is 10 minutes of NSDR enough to make a difference?
Yes. Research shows that sessions as short as 10-11 minutes can reduce cortisol, shift brainwave patterns from beta to theta, and replenish dopamine baseline levels. A 2024 study found that a 10 minute NSDR intervention was enough to improve both cognitive and physical performance. You don't need a long session to get meaningful results.
Can I do 10 minute NSDR at my desk?
Yes, you can do a 10 minute NSDR session at your desk. Lying down is better, but a desk setup works if you recline your chair as far back as possible, close your eyes, and use headphones with a guided track. The NSDR protocol works the same way seated. The body scan may feel less vivid, but the breathing and nervous system regulation still happen. I'd still recommend lying down when you can.
What's the difference between a 10 minute NSDR session and a power nap?
A power nap involves actually falling asleep, which means you lose conscious awareness and risk sleep inertia (that groggy, disoriented feeling when you wake up). A 10 minute NSDR session keeps you in a conscious but deeply relaxed state. You stay aware of the guided cues while your body enters a restorative mode. No grogginess, no sleep debt confusion, and no need for a 20-minute buffer to "wake up."
How often should I do a 10 minute NSDR session?
You should do a 10 minute NSDR session daily if you can. The strongest research outcomes come from consistent daily practice, even at short session durations. If daily feels like too much, aim for NSDR 3-5 times per week. The key is how often you show up, not how long each session lasts: 10 minutes every day beats 30 minutes once a week.
Do I need a guided track for a 10 minute NSDR session?
I'll be honest: you can do this self-guided, but I've found most people struggle that way, especially early on. A guided NSDR track walks you through the breath pacing, body scan sequence, and timing so you can focus on following along rather than directing yourself. Start with a guided track until the pattern feels automatic, then try it unguided if you want to.