You’re mid-panic attack and the only question running through your head is: when will this stop?
The short answer: most panic attacks peak within 10 minutes and fully resolve within 20–30 minutes. But there’s more to it than that — and understanding what’s actually happening helps you ride one out faster.
The Typical Panic Attack Timeline

Panic attacks follow a predictable physiological arc:
- 0–2 minutes: Sudden onset. Adrenaline floods your system. Heart rate spikes. The wave of dread hits.
- 2–10 minutes: Peak intensity. Chest tightness, racing heart, dizziness, shortness of breath. This is the worst of it.
- 10–20 minutes: Symptoms begin to subside as adrenaline clears. Heart rate drops. Breathing normalises.
- 20–30 minutes: Full resolution in most cases. You may feel exhausted, shaky, or emotionally drained.
The DSM-5-TR (the clinical bible for mental health diagnoses) defines a panic attack as reaching peak intensity within minutes — and research consistently puts average duration at under 30 minutes from onset to resolution.
Why Does It Feel Much Longer?
Time distortion during panic is well-documented. When your amygdala fires and your body enters full fight-or-flight mode, your brain’s time perception gets skewed. Ten minutes can feel like an hour.
This isn’t a quirk — it’s functional. An activated threat-response system narrows attention to the immediate danger and slows subjective time to allow faster reaction. Unfortunately, when the “danger” is internal (your own nervous system misfiring), this distortion makes an already terrible experience feel endless.
Knowing this cognitively doesn’t fully neutralise it in the moment, but it helps to remember: the clock says something very different to what your brain is reporting.
Can a Panic Attack Last Hours?
Technically, a single panic attack does not last hours. What can happen — and what many people experience — is a cluster: one attack subsides, then triggers another, creating a continuous or near-continuous period of panic symptoms.
This happens because:
- Hypervigilance kicks in. After the first attack, you’re scanning for signs of another one. This elevated anxiety state makes a second attack more likely.
- Avoidance behaviour maintains arousal. If you can’t leave the situation that triggered the first attack, the nervous system stays primed.
- Catastrophic thinking fuels the cycle. “I’m going to have another one” becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy — anxiety about panic causes more panic.
If you’re experiencing what feels like hours of continuous panic, it’s more accurate to describe it as a prolonged anxiety episode or a panic cluster, rather than a single extended attack. The distinction matters because the management strategies differ slightly.
Factors That Affect Duration
Not every attack follows the same arc. Several things influence how long yours lasts:
How you respond to it
Fighting the panic — tensing up, trying to control symptoms, fleeing — activates the nervous system further and extends the episode. Acceptance-based approaches (letting the wave happen without resistance) consistently shorten duration in clinical studies.
Your breathing pattern
Hyperventilation — which many people do involuntarily during panic — lowers CO2 levels and prolongs symptoms like dizziness, tingling, and chest tightness. Consciously slowing and deepening your exhale interrupts this loop and accelerates recovery.
Whether you’ve had them before
First-time panic attacks often last longer because there’s no frame of reference. Every symptom feels like evidence of something catastrophic. People who’ve had multiple attacks and learned that they always pass tend to get through them faster.
Underlying anxiety load
An already-primed nervous system — from high stress, poor sleep, caffeine, or sustained anxiety — produces longer and more intense attacks. Managing baseline anxiety reduces both frequency and duration.
Stimulants and substances
Caffeine, alcohol rebound (the 3am anxiety spike after drinking), and some medications can extend attacks by keeping the nervous system in a state of heightened arousal.
What to Do During a Panic Attack to Shorten It
The single most evidence-backed thing you can do: stop trying to stop it.
Paradoxically, accepting that the attack is happening — and that it will pass on its own — is more effective than fighting it. This is the core insight from panic-focused CBT and ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy).
Alongside acceptance, these techniques actively shorten duration:
Extended exhale breathing
Breathe in for 4 counts, out for 8. The long exhale stimulates the vagus nerve and triggers parasympathetic activity — your body’s brake pedal. This is direct physiological intervention, not distraction.
Name what’s happening
Say to yourself (or out loud): “This is a panic attack. I am not in danger. It will peak and pass.” Naming activates the prefrontal cortex and begins to counter the amygdala’s alarm signal.
Grounding
Feel your feet on the floor. Name five things you can physically sense — temperature, texture, weight. This pulls attention into the present and out of the internal panic loop.
Don’t flee the situation unnecessarily
Leaving a situation during a panic attack teaches your brain that the situation was dangerous and caused the attack. Over time this builds avoidance. If it’s safe to stay, staying (and getting through it) is better for long-term recovery.
After the Attack: What to Expect
Once a panic attack resolves, most people experience some combination of:
- Exhaustion or fatigue (the adrenaline crash)
- Emotional fragility or tearfulness
- Muscle soreness or tension (from sustained physical stress)
- Heightened anxiety about having another attack
This post-attack window is normal and temporary. The exhaustion is real — your body just ran a physiological sprint. Rest, hydration, and gentle movement help the recovery.
The heightened vigilance is the more important thing to address. If you spend the next several hours monitoring your body for signs of another attack, you’re significantly increasing the odds of one. Gentle redirection of attention to external tasks — not suppression, just redirect — helps break the monitoring cycle.
When to Seek Medical Help
See a doctor if:
- Attacks are lasting longer than 30 minutes with no sign of resolution
- You’re having multiple attacks per week
- Chest pain persists beyond the attack and doesn’t resolve
- You’re modifying your life significantly to avoid potential triggers
- This is your first episode and you have cardiac risk factors
On chest pain: panic attacks and cardiac events can feel similar. If chest pain is severe, persistent, or accompanied by left arm or jaw pain, seek emergency care to rule out a cardiac cause. Once you’ve had a cardiac workup and panic disorder is confirmed, you can manage future episodes with confidence.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a panic attack that lasts 2 hours possible?
A single attack lasting two hours is extremely rare. What’s more likely is a series of attacks close together, or a sustained anxiety state with recurring spikes. Both need attention but respond to different approaches.
Do panic attacks get shorter over time?
Yes, for most people with treatment. As you learn that attacks are not dangerous and build a track record of surviving them, both frequency and duration typically decrease. CBT specifically targets the catastrophic thinking that extends episodes.
Can you fall asleep during a panic attack?
Not at peak intensity — the physiological arousal level is incompatible with sleep. However, once the attack subsides and exhaustion sets in, sleep can follow relatively quickly.
Is it normal to feel awful for hours after?
Yes. The post-attack crash — fatigue, shakiness, emotional vulnerability — is a normal consequence of the adrenaline flood. It’s not a second attack; it’s your body returning to baseline. It typically fades within a few hours.
The Bottom Line
Most panic attacks last 20–30 minutes from start to resolution, peaking within the first 10 minutes. They are not dangerous and they always pass — even when they feel like they never will.
The duration can be shortened by accepting rather than fighting the attack, using extended exhale breathing, and grounding in the present. Over time, with the right approach, attacks typically become shorter, less intense, and less frequent.
If they’re happening regularly, CBT with a therapist trained in panic disorder is the highest-impact intervention available.
Sources:
- American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed.). DSM-5-TR Panic Attack criteria.
- Clark, D. M. (1986). A cognitive approach to panic. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 24(4), 461–470.
- Craske, M. G., & Barlow, D. H. (2007). Mastery of Your Anxiety and Panic (4th ed.). Oxford University Press.
- National Institute of Mental Health — Panic Disorder overview.
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