How to Stop Dizziness from Anxiety: 5 Grounding Techniques to Try

Experiencing dizziness from anxiety can be one of the more frustrating and confusing symptoms related to this mental health condition. However, learning more about what causes it and how you can respond may help ease these feelings.

Key Takeaways

  • Anxiety triggers dizziness through hyperventilation, adrenaline surges, and muscle tension that disrupt how the brain processes balance signals.
  • Grounding techniques work by redirecting your focus to the present moment, activating the parasympathetic nervous system, and easing dizziness.
  • Physical grounding methods like diaphragmatic breathing and the 5-4-3-2-1 sensory technique can reduce dizziness within minutes of practice.
  • Practicing grounding techniques daily, even outside of anxious episodes, helps your brain access these calming skills more quickly over time.
  • Residential, outpatient, and virtual anxiety treatment is available.

Why Anxiety Makes You Dizzy

Dizziness is one of the more unsettling physical symptoms of anxiety, and understanding why it happens can make it easier to manage. 

When anxiety spikes, your body activates the fight-or-flight response, flooding your system with stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol. This leads to rapid, shallow breathing (hyperventilation), which lowers carbon dioxide levels in your blood and reduces oxygen flow to the brain. The result is a lightheaded, woozy, or unsteady sensation.

Anxiety-related dizziness can also stem from neck and shoulder muscle tension, sudden blood pressure changes, and overstimulation of the vestibular system, which is the part of the inner ear and brain responsible for balance. The good news is that grounding techniques can interrupt this cycle by shifting your attention away from anxious thoughts and back into your body. 

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How to Stop Dizziness From Anxiety With 5 Grounding Techniques

1. Diaphragmatic (Belly) Breathing

Hyperventilation is one of the primary reasons anxiety causes dizziness, so correcting your breathing pattern is a direct way to address it. Diaphragmatic breathing slows your respiratory rate and restores the balance of oxygen and carbon dioxide in your bloodstream.

To practice this, do the following:

  • Place one hand on your chest and the other on your stomach, just above your navel.
  • Breathe in slowly through your nose for a count of four, directing the air deep into your belly so that your lower hand rises while your upper hand stays relatively still.
  • Hold for a count of four, then exhale through your mouth for a count of six.
  • Repeat this cycle for one to two minutes.

The extended exhale activates the parasympathetic nervous system, which slows your heart rate and helps ease lightheadedness.

2. The 5-4-3-2-1 Sensory Method

The 5-4-3-2-1 technique uses all five senses to anchor you in the present moment, pulling your brain’s attention away from the anxiety loop that fuels dizziness. It works by giving your mind a structured task that requires focus on what is physically around you.

To use this technique, identify each of the following one step at a time:

  • Five things you can see.
  • Four things you can touch (notice their texture and temperature).
  • Three things you can hear.
  • Two things you can smell.
  • One thing you can taste.

If you cannot smell or taste anything in the moment, recall a favorite scent or flavor. By the time you finish, your nervous system has typically begun to settle, and the dizziness often fades.

3. Firm-Footed Grounding

When dizziness strikes, your sense of balance can feel unreliable. Firm-footed grounding reconnects you with the physical stability beneath you. If you are standing, press your feet firmly into the floor and pay close attention to the sensation of the ground supporting your weight. Slowly shift your weight from your heels to your toes, then back again. If you are sitting, plant both feet flat on the floor and push down gently, feeling the resistance.

This method works because redirecting your attention to the body’s contact with a solid surface helps steady the vestibular system. Some people find it helpful to remove their shoes so they can feel the floor’s texture and temperature directly. The physical awareness created by this exercise counters the “floating” or disconnected sensation that anxiety-related dizziness often produces.

4. Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR)

Anxiety commonly causes muscle tension throughout the body, particularly in the jaw, shoulders, and neck. This tension can worsen dizziness by restricting blood flow and compressing nerves. Progressive muscle relaxation addresses this by systematically tensing and then releasing different muscle groups.

Start with your feet. Curl your toes and hold the tension for about five to ten seconds, then release and notice the contrast as the muscles relax. Move upward through your calves, thighs, abdomen, hands, arms, shoulders, and face. By the time you reach the top of your body, the combined release of tension often reduces both the physical discomfort and the anxious thoughts feeding the dizziness. PMR can be practiced in a chair, on a couch, or lying down, making it accessible in most situations.

5. Cold Water or Cold Object Technique

A brief exposure to cold can quickly interrupt the anxiety cycle by stimulating the vagus nerve, which helps regulate heart rate and calm the nervous system. This makes it a useful option when dizziness feels overwhelming, and you need fast relief.

You can run cold water over your wrists, splash it on your face, or hold a cold object, such as an ice cube or a chilled water bottle. Focus on the cold sensation and describe it to yourself mentally: the temperature, the feeling against your skin, how it changes as you hold it. The sharp sensory input pulls your brain firmly into the present, reducing the “spinning” or “floating” feeling that accompanies anxious dizziness.

When to Practice & What to Expect

Grounding techniques are most effective when you practice them regularly, outside of acute anxiety episodes, too. Spending even 30 seconds a day on belly breathing or the 5-4-3-2-1 method trains your nervous system to access these calming pathways more quickly when you need them.

It is also worth noting that while grounding techniques can provide meaningful relief from anxiety-related dizziness, they address symptoms rather than the root cause. If dizziness is frequent, interferes with your daily activities, or is accompanied by symptoms like hearing loss, severe vertigo, or chest pain, consulting a healthcare provider is a good first step. 

A mental health professional can help determine if an underlying anxiety disorder is driving your symptoms and recommend a treatment plan that targets the source.

How AMFM Mental Health Treatment Can Help With Anxiety

AMFM residential treatment facility with warm, home-like interior and natural light, designed for anxiety recovery.

At AMFM (A Mission For Michael) Mental Health Treatment, we understand that anxiety symptoms like dizziness can disrupt daily life and feel overwhelming. Our programs address anxiety at its root using cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), and somatic approaches that focus on the connection between your body and mental health.

Our expert clinicians are passionate about helping you find hope and lasting healing. In fact, 93% of our clients felt the staff care about them and their success based on the 2025 Outcomes Study we conducted.

We tailor treatment to each person’s needs by creating personalized plans that build long-term coping skills and resilience. We offer several levels of support, including residential treatment and outpatient programs.

We believe the right environment can support your healing. Our locations are designed to provide you with a calm, home-like space where you can focus on your well-being.

AMFM Mental Health Treatment accepts most health insurance plans and provides payment guidance to make treatment more accessible. To check your insurance coverage for mental health treatment, simply complete our confidential verification form. There is no cost or obligation to check what your benefits cover.

We understand how difficult it can be to reach out for support. Our team is available 24/7 to help you decide what the best next step is for you. Call 866-478-4383 to learn more about how treatment can work to alleviate anxiety and its symptoms. 

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Anxiety-Related Dizziness FAQ

Anxiety-related dizziness usually lasts a few seconds to several minutes during an acute episode. If anxiety is chronic and untreated, dizziness may come and go over days or weeks. Practicing grounding techniques can help shorten episodes.

Yes. You do not need to have a full panic attack to experience dizziness from anxiety. Chronic stress, low-level worry, and ongoing muscle tension can affect the vestibular system, leading to a persistent sense of unsteadiness or lightheadedness.

If dizziness is new, severe, or accompanied by symptoms like hearing changes, fainting, or chest pain, a medical evaluation is recommended. A healthcare provider can rule out physical conditions and help determine if anxiety is the primary cause.

Grounding techniques are generally safe and can complement medication or therapy. They are behavioral strategies that do not interfere with prescribed treatments. Your provider can help you integrate these techniques into a broader care plan.

At AMFM Mental Health Treatment, we combine evidence-based therapies like CBT, DBT, and EMDR with holistic modalities such as art therapy, somatic experiencing, and mindfulness training. Our programs span residential, PHP, IOP, and virtual care, giving each person a personalized path to recovery across our California, Minnesota, Virginia, and Washington locations.

At AMFM, we strive to provide the most up-to-date and accurate medical information based on current best practices, evolving information, and our team’s approach to care. Our aim is that our readers can make informed decisions about their healthcare.

Our reviewers are credentialed medical providers specializing and practicing behavioral healthcare. We follow strict guidelines when fact-checking information and only use credible sources when citing statistics and medical information. Look for the medically reviewed badge on our articles for the most up-to-date and accurate information.

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