Brain & Body

Why Do We Yawn?

People yawn when they are tired, bored, waking up, or simply watching someone else do it. It is one of the most familiar things your body does, yet it refuses to behave like a simple reflex. For such a small act, yawning has an oddly large number of possible jobs.

The short answer

Yawning is weird because scientists still don't have one clean answer. The old idea, that your body needs more oxygen, has been mostly ruled out. What seems more likely is that yawning happens when your brain is shifting gears: moving from low activity to high, or the other way around. It may also help cool a warming brain by pulling in cooler air and increasing blood flow. It happens when you're tired, waking up, bored, or stressed. Every vertebrate animal does it, which tells us it has been around a very long time and probably matters, but exactly why is still being worked out.

Person yawning with mouth wide open

Transitioning between low-activity and high-activity states

Main trigger

Your body is grabbing extra oxygen

What people think

Possibly brain temperature regulation and a state-change signal

What actually happens

No, it's harmless and happens to every vertebrate on Earth

Should you worry?

Transitioning between low-activity and high-activity states

Main trigger

Your body is grabbing extra oxygen

What people think

Possibly brain temperature regulation and a state-change signal

What actually happens

No, it's harmless and happens to every vertebrate on Earth

Should you worry?

Visual answer

What Happens When You Yawn

A yawn is a coordinated whole-body event, not just a mouth movement.

1

Jaw drops wide open

The mouth opens wide, stretching jaw muscles and increasing blood flow to the skull and face.

2

Deep breath drawn in

You inhale deeply, pulling cooler air into the body. Blood flow in veins in the brain temporarily increases.

3

Brief breath hold

There's a longer-than-normal pause before exhaling, the lungs are fully stretched at this point.

4

Slow exhale and often a stretch

Air releases, eyes close, and many people extend into a full body stretch, flexing muscles and joints at the same time.

Real reason

Scientists Are Genuinely Not Sure, But Here's the Leading Theory

The oxygen theory, that yawning pulls in extra oxygen when your blood CO2 is too high, has been tested and mostly doesn't hold up. Breathing higher-oxygen air doesn't stop yawning. Breathing CO2-rich air doesn't make you yawn more.

The stronger theory right now is brain temperature regulation. Your brain runs warm when active and cooler when at rest. Yawning may help cool a warming brain by drawing in cooler air and stretching the jaw to increase blood flow. Some research found that yawning happens more in moderate temperatures, not when it's already too hot outside to cool down that way.

There's also a timing pattern: most yawns cluster around waking up and falling asleep, and around transitions from low-alert to high-alert states. This has led researchers to think yawning is your brain's way of shifting gears, signaling or enabling a change in alertness level.

Myth vs reality

Myth vs Reality

What people think

You yawn because your brain needs more oxygen

This was the go-to explanation for a long time. It feels intuitive, yawn, deep breath, more oxygen. But studies that tested this by giving people different concentrations of oxygen or carbon dioxide found it didn't change how often they yawned.

What actually happens

It's probably about brain temperature and state transitions

The best-supported theories point to cooling the brain and signaling a shift in alertness. Every vertebrate yawns, from fish to dogs to humans, which suggests it evolved for something real. We just haven't locked it down completely yet.

Common triggers

What Actually Makes You Yawn

Tiredness or waking up

Most yawns happen near sleep transitions, falling asleep or coming out of sleep

Boredom or low stimulation

Low-activity states seem to prime the brain to shift gears, triggering a yawn

Seeing or thinking about yawning

Contagious yawning, seeing, hearing, or even reading about yawning can trigger one

Quick answers

Common questions

Is yawning a sign of low oxygen?

Probably not. Research that adjusted oxygen and CO2 levels in people didn't change how much they yawned. The oxygen theory has mostly been set aside.

Why do I yawn when I'm stressed?

Stress is a state-change trigger. Your brain may use yawning to help shift between different levels of alertness, from calm to tense, or trying to come down from tension.

Why do I yawn so much in the morning?

Morning is a major state transition, from deep sleep to wakefulness. Most yawning is clustered around exactly these kinds of transitions, which fits the theory that yawning helps your brain shift gears.

Is yawning the same as being bored?

They often go together, but yawning isn't caused by boredom directly. Boredom is a low-stimulation state, and low-stimulation states seem to prompt the brain to shift, which may trigger a yawn.

Why does yawning feel satisfying?

Many people feel more alert or relaxed after a yawn. It may reflect the brief physiological reset, the deep breath, the jaw stretch, the slight increase in blood flow, doing its job.

Do animals yawn for the same reason humans do?

Possibly, but social yawning, catching someone else's yawn, seems more developed in social mammals. Fish and reptiles yawn but don't seem to 'catch' yawns the way chimps, dogs, and humans do.

Parkinson's Law

Your next rabbit hole

Parkinson's Law

Parkinson's Law, coined by British historian Cyril Northcote Parkinson in 1955, states that work expands to fill the time available for its completion. If you give yourself a week to do a task, it takes a week. If you give yourself an hour, it takes an hour. The law explains why bureaucracies grow, why projects take longer than expected, and why deadlines are so effective. It is not about laziness. It is about how humans perceive and use time.

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