Sweaty girl’s guide: 50 ways to stop excessive sweating while traveling

Being super sweaty while traveling is miserable, embarrassing, and uncomfortable. I know firsthand! Here’s a list of 50 ways to stop excessive sweating while traveling.

 

Last year, from the sweaty depths of Pakistan in summer (note: bad idea), I expounded a bit on my ways of combatting excessive heat while traveling.

Fast-forward one year to this summer, and the struggle is real once more. This time, it’s the heat and the humidity. Monsoon season is sweeping through India, summer temperatures are soaring, and I, for one, am dying.

 

How to stop excessive sweating while traveling - Sweaty back - Lost With Purpose

This is what 10 minutes of standing and doing absolutely nothing does to me…

It’s incredibly humiliating to look like a drowned rat every time I step out into the sun, and my sweaty tendencies have been getting me down in past weeks. So, I did what I do every time I’m having a (literal) meltdown: head to the interwebs for support!

The Girls Love Travel Facebook group is a massive community of women from all over the world, and the perfect place to travel to with any kind of travel-related questions, concerns, and woes. True to form, when I asked them how to deal with excessive sweating while traveling, I ended up with far, far more answers than I expected. From bananas to baby powder, some of them are quite intriguing.

In the chance that this will one day help out another sweaty soul, here’s a list of 50 ways to deal with excessive sweating while traveling, based on recommendations from the women of Girls Love Travel.

 

Sweating is no fun, plain and simple. If you're a sweaty person looking for ways to stop sweating while traveling, look no further. Here are 50 ways to stop excessive sweating while traveling, ranging from peppermint oil to ice in strange places to bananas for breakfast!

 

50 ways to stop excessive sweating while traveling

If you’re impatient:

 

How to stop sweating while traveling - Patterned clothes in a sea of yellow corn - Lost With Purpose

Choosing the right clothes to sweat less when traveling

  1. Wear lightweight, loose-fitting clothes. Think maxi skirts, loose shirts, and shorts where possible.
  2. Choose cotton or silk clothing where possible.
  3. Wear compression shorts to help prevent chub rub (translation: chafing of thighs).
  4. Go commando, if that’s cool with you. Who needs underwear, anyway?
  5. Same goes for the bra—only wear it if you have to, otherwise, it’ll just suck up the sweat.
  6. Take a thin scarf, wet it, wring it out so it’s a bit damp, then wrap it around your neck or hair.
  7. Pack light colored clothes. White will reflect sunlight and keep you cool, while black only absorbs the sun/heat.
  8. Don’t. Wear. Gray. If there’s any color that looks like absolute shit with sweat stains, it’s gray!
  9. On that note, choose the most wildly patterned clothes possible. Patterns hide sweat stains the best!
  10. Pack a wide-brimmed hat. You know, like those travel girl hats you see all over Instagram, or those somewhat nerdy safari hats your weird uncle likes to wear to the beach – Buy travel hats here.
  11. Try Frogg Toggs cooling towels. You wet them at the start of each day, put your towel wherever needs cooling the most, and voila—coolness for hours! Don’t ask me how it works, clearly, it’s some sort of magic juju. – Buy Frogg Toggs here.

 

Pick the right products for a less sweaty travel experience

Note: I’m no doctor, as you might have guessed, and I haven’t tried all of these. Some of these suggestions are prescription-only in some countries. Don’t be dumb, and do ask your doctor before putting weird things into/onto/around your body. (Unless you just can’t help yourself.)

  1. Baby powder can be used all over your body to absorb the sweat and keep you dry – Buy baby powder here.
  2. Doctors can prescribe Propantheline Bromide tablets, which stop your skin from sweating.
  3. Prickly heat powder cools your skin down, plus it helps to prevent heat rash. Win win! – Buy prickly heat powder here.
  4. Try antiperspirant sticks like Certain Dri. You apply them the night before you go out for maximum effect – Buy Certain Dri here.
  5. If sticks are ick and spray is more your thing, Odaban makes antiperspirant sprays – Buy Odaban here.
  6. If super strength antiperspirants sound like a bit much, try using men’s deodorants—they’re much stronger than women’s deodorant when it comes to antiperspirants.
  7. Some girls recommended dripping peppermint essential oil down your spine to cool down (and on your clothes for the aroma). Stay fresh and smell nice! – Buy peppermint essential oil here.
  8. Baking soda can be patted all over your body to help absorb sweat – Buy baking soda here.
  9. Alum blocks are more commonly used to treat razor burn, but they also help to close up your pores, preventing excessive sweating – Buy alum blocks here.
  10. 3B Face Saver antiperspirant gel can be used on your face to keep the glistening at bay – Get 3B Face Saver here.
  11. Gold Bond is a kind of powder spray that you can put pretty much anywhere (don’t take that the wrong way) to keep dry. Excellent for those plagued by chub rub chafing! – Get Gold Bond here.
  12. Sweat block antiperspirant wipes are clinical strength and will help keep the sweat away for days. Days! – Get your sweat blockers here.

Safety note: Talcum powder is often recommended as a way of preventing excessive sweating, but sometimes it contains asbestos… which cause cancer. Beware. Some studies also point to the possibility that talcum powder used near women’s genitals can cause ovarian cancer. 

 

50 ways to deal with excessive sweat while traveling - Alex hanging out of a train in India - Lost With Purpose

Act cool, stay cool with these tips to stop sweating when traveling

  1. Try soaking your hands and feet in a bucket of cold water for quick relief.
  2. Hold an ice cube on your wrists (over a vein) to feel a sweeeet cooling sensation.
  3. Wash your face off regularly. Keeping the sweat levels low and your pores clean will relieve you from the sticky, icky feeling.
  4. Before bathing or showering, rub your pits and other sweaty areas with lemon or baking soda, let it sit for a few minutes, then jump under the water.
  5. Freeze your underwear. Feels good man.
  6. Stop using beauty lotions, moisturizers, etc. They’ll just clog your pores and make your life worse.
  7. Same goes for makeup. Why are you even wearing makeup in sweaty places?! It serves no purpose! (Aside from making you look like a melty monster from the deep lagoon.)

 

Eating and drinking the sweat away    

  1. I shouldn’t have to say this, but drink lots of water. ALL THE WATER.
  2. Get some electrolytes in your body. You can find them in sports drinks and juices. Tea with a bit of sugar can also work wonders.
  3. Put ORS (oral rehydration salts) in your water. They’re also a great way of getting electrolytes + all the other goodness your body needs into your fluids.
  4. If you’re an all-natural kind of person, try adding iodized salt and lemon juice to your water.
  5. Make sage tea (or even better, iced sage tea!). Sage is known to help reduce sweating.
  6. It breaks my heart to say so, but avoid caffeine. Sorry, coffee fiends. I feel ya.
  7. Freeze half of a bottle of water each night, then fill up the empty space before heading out for the day. (It’ll also keep your bottle from exploding in the freezer.)
  8. Eat a banana each morning to keep you cool throughout the day.
  9. Load up on room temperature water most of all. Though not as sweetly satisfying as icy cool drinks, it’s best for helping your body regulate internal temperatures.
  10. Eat ice cream! Do I really need to explain why?

 

How to stop excessive sweating while traveling - Alex walking through the White Rann of Kutch in Gujarat, India... without sweating! - Lost With Purpose

Going out like a champ

  1. Avoid the middle of the day! Get your sightseeing done in the early morning and late evening. Or just become nocturnal, that’s cool, too.
  2. Don’t overdo yourself. Heat is rough on the body, especially if you’re not used to it. You can’t do as much as you would do in more “normal” temperatures.
  3. Try to avoid going from one extreme to the other quickly, ex. moving from ice-cold air conditioning to the furnace outdoors.
  4. Travel slowly. Rushing to get from sight to sight = straining your body. It’s okay to saunter and chill in cafes, too!
  5. Carry an umbrella, or stay in the shade. If you’re worried about looking silly, know that using parasols for shade is quite common in many countries.

 

Pack smart to minimize sweating during your travels

  1. Work your fan game. A stylish hand fan looks bo$$y, is easy to pack, and is an easy way to cool down – Buy a hand fan here.
  2. If a fan isn’t your style, carry a handkerchief. You’ll look classy instead of soggy and pathetic while wiping yourself off – Get your handkerchief here.
  3. If a handkerchief is too much class effort to keep clean, carry tissues or wet wipes with you at all times.
  4. Spray fans aren’t just for kids, you know. No shame in carrying one around! – Buy a spray fan here.
  5. Even tackier but oh-so-satisfying: a fan necklace. Hang this baby around your neck, and you’ll be blasted with air as you wander around. You’ll look like a weirdo, but not as strange as you would if you were doused with sweat. Get your funky fan necklace here.

What are your favorite ways to stop the sweat while on the road?

Sweating is no fun, plain and simple. If you're a sweaty person looking for ways to stop sweating while traveling, look no further. Here are 50 ways to stop excessive sweating while traveling, ranging from peppermint oil to ice in strange places to bananas for breakfast!

 

Looking for more travel tips and inspo? Here’s how my partner and I traveled the world for 1 year for less than $10,000 per person.

 

Yay transparency! There are affiliate links in this post. I earn a bit of change if you buy stuff using my links, at no extra cost to you. Think of it as a way of saying thanks for the tips 🙂

Alex Reynolds profile picture

Alex Reynolds

American by birth, British by passport, Filipina by appearance. Addicted to ice cream. Enjoys climbing trees, dislikes falling out. Has great fondness for goats which is usually not reciprocated.

More about Alex

16 thoughts on “Sweaty girl’s guide: 50 ways to stop excessive sweating while traveling

    Megan says:

    Hahhaha what a brilliant post. I was a sweater growing up as I played sports and I think even when I wasn’t, my body just kept sweating. As an adult, I am thankfully less sweaty (although probably still more than the average person), but my man sweats just sitting on the dang sofa. I wiill send this post his way… 🙂

    Alex says:

    Sweating on the sofa? I know the feels—I call that “swampass” myself 😛 Glad you don’t suffer such an affliction anymore!

    Baljeet says:

    How do you deal with other girly stuff such as that lovely time of the month or even shaving your legs

    Alex says:

    The same way I deal with it at home, or anywhere else in the world for that matter.

    Perhaps I’m mistaken, but isn’t Baljeet a boy’s name? Is there a reason you, as a man, need to inquire as to how I handle my periods?

    Cynthia says:

    Hahaha, great post and great tips! I’m blessed of being not so much of a sweater myself but you’ll definitely help other travel girls with preventing some meltdowns along the way!

    Sebastiaan says:

    Haha and not only girls 😉 There are plenty of guys out there with the same problem!

    Sweaty Girl says:

    This post is amazing!! I am constantly embarrassed by how much I sweat compared to the people around me, and somehow I always manage to travel to during the hottest times of the year. Do you have any experience with the face antiperspirant??

    Alex says:

    The curse of summer vacation time happening in… well, summer! I feel yo pain, girl. I don’t personally have any experience with the facial wipes, but I’ve tried a bunch of the clinical strength deodorants, and as long as you apply them properly (the night before, usually) they work a treat. I imagine it’s similar with the wipes—multiple girls recommended them to me!

    Nick says:

    Don’t move and keep on drinking!

    Sebastiaan says:

    I like the don’t move tip 😉

    Danila says:

    ohhh Alex, some great tips, thank you! Have just spent the past 18 months in Australia and SE Asia, and although the countries and the travelling were fabulous, the sweating in the humidity was not! Going to bookmark this, as we’re heading to India and more SE Asia in November onwards 🙂
    I also try mind games, imagining myself as a polar bear rolling in the snow…

    Sebastiaan says:

    Haha we love the polar bear idea. Trying it out right now 😉

    Kelli Gross says:

    What a guide! The tips you have stated down are very informative.

    Holly says:

    Every time I’m at the airport, I get a pat down because the xray scanner picks up something on my back and shoulders. I always just laugh and say I’m the sweatiest person ever as they pat my soaking wet shirt down for nothing. Airport staff don’t get paid enough to feel a stranger’s sweaty patches.

Leave a Reply to Danila Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *