Relax ASMR: 110 Videos
110 verified relax ASMR videos across 11 trigger types, organised by what works best for relax.
Curated relax ASMR videos, organised by trigger type across 4 categories.
Relaxation ASMR targets the autonomic nervous system's shift from sympathetic (fight-or-flight) to parasympathetic (rest-and-digest) activation. Poerio et al. (2018) measured this directly: ASMR-responsive participants showed significantly reduced heart rates during ASMR videos. Unlike meditation, which requires active practice, ASMR relaxation is passive — you press play and let the stimulus do the work.
How to use ASMR for relaxation
Find a comfortable position and close your eyes if possible. Headphones improve the experience significantly — binaural audio creates a three-dimensional soundscape that enhances immersion. Start with a trigger you already know works for you. If you're new, try soft-speaking or personal attention roleplays; they simulate one-on-one care, which is one of the strongest relaxation triggers across ASMR research. Give each video at least 5 minutes before switching. The relaxation response builds gradually — most people don't feel the full effect until 3–4 minutes in.
Most effective relaxation triggers
Personal attention and soft-speaking are the highest-rated relaxation triggers in our database. Both simulate interpersonal care — someone focused entirely on you, speaking gently, moving slowly. This maps to the social grooming hypothesis of ASMR: the sensation evolved from the calming effect of being attended to by a trusted person. For non-verbal relaxation, brushing and hair-play sounds are consistently effective. Nature sounds (rain, ocean, fire) provide a more ambient relaxation path that works even for people who don't experience traditional ASMR tingles.
Relaxation tips
- Dim the lights or use the video purely as audio. Visual attention competes with relaxation.
- Try a 10-minute ASMR session before a stressful meeting or task to pre-load the parasympathetic response.
- Layer triggers: some creators combine whispering with tapping or brushing, which provides more sensory variety without increasing intensity.
- If you feel annoyed by a trigger instead of relaxed (misophonia response), switch immediately. Not every trigger works for every person.
Frequently asked questions
Is ASMR relaxation just for people who experience tingles?
No — in Poerio et al. (2018), participants who watched ASMR videos showed a reduced heart rate and raised skin conductance, an autonomic relaxation response. Effects were measured in people who report ASMR. ASMR is not a medical treatment. — source
How long does it take for ASMR relaxation to work?
Most ASMR viewers report the relaxation response building over 3-5 minutes of sustained listening. The physiological changes measured in Poerio et al. (2018) — reduced heart rate — were observed during video viewing sessions. If you feel no effect after 10 minutes, the trigger may not work for you. — source
Can you build a tolerance to ASMR relaxation?
Many regular ASMR viewers report diminishing responses to familiar triggers over time. The common recommendation in ASMR communities is to take breaks (2-3 days) or rotate to unfamiliar triggers. No controlled study has measured ASMR habituation rates.