7 Luxury Cold Plunge Resorts Around the World for the Ultimate Wellness Vacation
Cold plunge resorts are booming as luxury wellness travelers seek out destinations built around cold water therapy, hydrotherapy circuits and recovery-focused experiences. Here’s what to know about the trend — and seven of the best cold plunge resorts around the world to put on your radar.
What Are the Top Cold Plunge Resorts In Europe and Iceland?
Four standout properties anchor Europe’s cold plunge resort scene: Deplar Farm in Iceland, CopenHot in Denmark, Arctic Bath in Sweden and Krallerhof in Austria. Each pairs cold water immersion with traditional Nordic or Alpine wellness rituals.
Deplar Farm sits in northern Iceland’s Fljót Valley on the Troll Peninsula, a remote luxury retreat housed in a converted sheep farm. Guests can use outdoor cold plunges, soak in a Viking sauna and — depending on the season — view the Northern Lights directly from the water. Rolling in the snow after sauna sessions completes the full Nordic-style cold therapy experience.
CopenHot, located on Refshaleøen in Copenhagen, is considered Denmark’s largest outdoor spa. The experience includes fire-heated hot tubs, panoramic saunas and dedicated cold plunge tubs overlooking Copenhagen Harbor. Cold plunging is often treated as a social activity in Denmark, where winter bathing clubs continue to grow across the country.
Arctic Bath in Sweden is widely considered one of the top cold plunge hotels in the world. The floating eco-luxury retreat features a circular open-air cold bath at its center, where guests plunge directly into the freezing Lule River before moving on to sauna sessions and spa treatments.
Krallerhof in the Austrian Alps takes a different approach with its ATMOSPHERE wellness space. The property includes a 50-meter infinity pool that extends toward a natural lake, along with cold plunge saunas and other hydrotherapy-focused features. While Iceland and Sweden lean into raw, river-fed plunges, Krallerhof shows how Alpine resorts have folded cold therapy into more architecturally polished wellness facilities — a sign of how broadly the trend has spread across European luxury hospitality.
Which Cold Plunge Resorts Are Best In North America?
Three properties lead North America’s cold plunge resort offerings: Bota Bota in Montreal, Alyeska Resort in Alaska and Canyon Ranch in Tucson, Arizona. They span urban floating spas, mountain wellness retreats and desert health destinations.
Bota Bota, spa-sur-l’eau, is a floating spa anchored in Montreal’s Old Port. The property combines massages and facials with a water circuit made up of saunas, steam baths, cold baths, cold showers and relaxation areas. Its harbor views and structured hydrotherapy circuit make it one of the best-known urban cold plunge destinations in North America.
Alyeska Resort is set within Alaska’s Chugach Mountains and offers a 50,000-square-foot Nordic spa. Its wellness circuit includes hot tubs, saunas and dedicated cold plunges designed around traditional hydrotherapy practices, giving guests a full thermal contrast experience without leaving the property.
Canyon Ranch Tucson rounds out the list with a dedicated cold plunge pool inside its larger holistic wellness programming. The property was named the #1 Wellness Resort in the Americas by the Michelin Guide in 2025. Guests combine cold water therapy with spa treatments, fitness programs and broader health-focused experiences centered on recovery and nervous system regulation.
Together, the three properties show how varied the U.S. and Canadian cold plunge resort market has become — from a harbor-anchored barge in Quebec to a high-altitude spa in Alaska to a destination wellness program in the Sonoran Desert.
What Are the Health Benefits of Cold Plunging at These Resorts?
Cold plunging — immersing the body in water below 60 degrees Fahrenheit for short periods of time — has been linked in studies to improved insulin sensitivity, increased dopamine, lower inflammation, increased metabolism and reduced stress and anxiety. That research, paired with social media interest, has helped drive demand for resorts that build cold therapy into the guest experience.
Dr. Lubna Khan-Salim, an aesthetic surgeon and cold-plunge advocate, told Vogue in 2024 that cold water therapy has long been part of Scandinavian wellness culture but its popularity in the wellness industry has grown significantly in the last five years.
“It particularly took hold in lockdown during the global pandemic,” she said. “It was a relatively safe activity for people to do outdoors while social distancing and many people took to social media to share how a cold dip improved their mood and health.”
Dr. Marcus Coplin, a naturopathic medical doctor and medical director for The Springs Resort, told Vogue, “Cold water plunging is like an exercise system for the circulatory, hormonal, nervous, and immune system all at once.” He added, “Recently, I’ve seen a major uptick in the amount of people who want to take a cold water plunge as part of their self-directed health and well-being practice.”
Most cold plunge resorts pair the practice with saunas, hot tubs and other restorative treatments, allowing guests to alternate between hot and cold immersion as part of structured hydrotherapy circuits. That contrast format — common at properties like Bota Bota, Alyeska and CopenHot — is part of why cold plunge resorts have moved from a Scandinavian niche to a global luxury wellness category.
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This story was originally published May 7, 2026 at 1:18 PM with the headline "7 Luxury Cold Plunge Resorts Around the World for the Ultimate Wellness Vacation."