Cryotherapy cost depends on the type of session you book.
If you are searching for cryotherapy prices near you, it helps to understand what affects cost before comparing providers.
In the UK, a single whole body cryotherapy or cryo chamber session often sits somewhere between the high £30s and around £90 or more, depending on the provider, location, equipment, and how the session is delivered. Localised cryotherapy is usually priced lower, with clearly listed sessions commonly around £30 to £45 or more.
That range exists because cryotherapy is not one fixed service. A whole body cryotherapy chamber session, a localised cryotherapy appointment, and dermatology cryotherapy for skin lesions are all very different things.
This guide focuses on wellness and recovery cryotherapy costs, including whole body cryotherapy and localised cryotherapy, rather than medical or dermatology cryotherapy.
Key takeaways
- Whole body cryotherapy in the UK often ranges from the high £30s to around £90 or more for a single session
- Localised cryotherapy is often priced lower, commonly around £30 to £45 or more where clearly listed
- For most customers, “cryotherapy chamber cost” usually means the price of booking a cryo chamber session, not buying the equipment
- Brysk offers single, shared, package and membership options. Whole body cryotherapy single sessions are £65 for one person, £90 for two people, and £105 for three people, with packs reducing the effective cost for regular users. Localised cryotherapy is £45 as a single session, with localised packs also available.
- Cost matters, but so do equipment, supervision, safety procedures, and how the session is actually delivered
Jump to
2. A quick note on “cryotherapy chamber cost”
3. How much does whole body cryotherapy cost?
4. How much does localised cryotherapy cost?
5. Does cryotherapy cost more in some parts of the UK?
6. Why do cryotherapy prices vary so much?
7. Why packs and memberships can change the real cost
8. What affects value beyond the headline price?
9. Is cheaper cryotherapy always better value?
10. Which type of cryotherapy may suit you best?
11. So, what does cryotherapy usually cost?
12. FAQs
13. Thinking about trying cryotherapy in Manchester?
A quick cryotherapy price comparison
Before getting into the detail, it helps to separate whole body cryotherapy from localised cryotherapy.
| Type of cryotherapy | Typical price range | What affects the price most |
|---|---|---|
| Whole body cryotherapy / cryo chamber | Often around £35 to £90 or more per session | Region, provider, chamber type, supervision, offers and packages |
| Localised cryotherapy | Often around £30 to £45 or more per session | Area treated, appointment structure, provider setup |
| Brysk whole body cryo | £65 solo, £90 for two people, £105 for three people. Packs reduce the effective solo session cost from £65 to as low as £32.50, with larger shared packs reducing the per-person cost further. | Supervised electric chamber session, shared booking options, package value |
| Brysk localised cryo | £45 single session. Packs reduce the effective cost from £45 to as low as £22.50 per session on larger packs. | Directed cold-air treatment at around –32°C, usually 10–20 minutes depending on area, sensitivity and concern |
A quick note on “cryotherapy chamber cost”
When people search for cryotherapy chamber cost, they are often trying to understand the price of using a cryotherapy chamber rather than buying one.
This guide focuses on customer session prices: what you might pay to book whole body cryotherapy, what localised cryotherapy usually costs, and why prices vary between providers.
If you are comparing cryo chamber sessions, the chamber still matters. Equipment type, supervision, session structure and safety checks can all affect the value of the session, not just the headline price.
So the first thing to understand is that “cryotherapy cost” is really two questions: how much does whole body cryotherapy cost? and how much does localised cryotherapy cost?
How much does whole body cryotherapy cost?
Whole body cryotherapy, often booked as a cryotherapy chamber or cryo chamber session, is usually the more expensive of the two main recovery-focused formats.
From visible UK wellness-provider pricing, single cryo chamber sessions can sit anywhere from the mid-£30s up to around £90 or more depending on provider, location, equipment, and appointment structure.
That reflects how varied the category is.
Some providers offer lower introductory prices or package-led pricing, while premium city-centre studios may charge more because of the equipment, space, supervision, and support built around the session.
In Manchester city centre, Brysk offers whole body cryotherapy as a single session for £65 for one person, £90 for two people, or £105 for three people. For people using cryotherapy regularly, packs can reduce the effective cost per session, with larger packs offering better value than booking single sessions each time.
This matters because cryotherapy is often most useful when it becomes part of a sensible recovery routine, rather than a one-off novelty. If you already know you want to use cryotherapy regularly, comparing package value may be more useful than comparing the single-session price alone.
How much does localised cryotherapy cost?
Localised cryotherapy is often priced below whole body cryotherapy, but the way providers present it can be less consistent.
Where local pricing is clearly listed, examples currently sit around £30, £45, or are handled by enquiry depending on the provider and treatment area.
At Brysk, localised cryotherapy is £45 as a single session, with packs available for people using it more regularly. The treatment itself usually lasts around 10–20 minutes depending on the area being treated and the nature of the concern, with the wider appointment allowing time for guidance, setup and support.
Localised cryotherapy is designed for a specific area rather than a broader, system-wide cold exposure. At Brysk, it uses directed cold air at around –32°C to create a targeted cold stimulus, encouraging local vasoconstriction followed by circulation changes as the area naturally warms again.
It also uses a different temperature and delivery profile from whole body cryotherapy, because the cold is applied to a targeted area rather than distributed across the full body inside a chamber.
That is different from simply placing an ice pack on the area, where the cold is direct-contact, less adjustable and can feel sharper or more uncomfortable.
For someone managing a specific area of stiffness, soreness or irritation, the value is in the control: the cold can be directed, adjusted and monitored rather than simply held in place until the area feels numb.
Does cryotherapy cost more in some parts of the UK?
Often, yes.
Prices can vary by region. Sessions in London and other premium city-centre settings often sit at the upper end of the range, while some providers outside those areas price lower.
That does not automatically mean one is better value than the other. It simply shows that region is one of several factors affecting price, alongside equipment, supervision, and the kind of session being delivered.
Why do cryotherapy prices vary so much?
Price differences usually come down to a few main things:
- Whole body vs localised – These are different services with different setups
- Region – London pricing is often higher than some North West pricing
- Equipment – Whole body chamber setups cost more to run than simple targeted treatments
- Supervision and safety procedures – Some providers build more process and oversight around the session than others
- Offers, memberships, and packages – Some providers use lower entry prices to lead people into bundles or memberships
- Chamber type – Electric chambers, nitrogen systems, and localised cryotherapy devices all involve different setup, running, and delivery considerations
The way cold is delivered can also change how controlled, comfortable, and repeatable the session feels in practice.
That is why it is not very useful to compare cryotherapy prices as if every provider is selling the same thing.
If you want to go deeper into what sits behind the price beyond the numbers alone, it also helps to read what you’re actually paying for in a cryotherapy session.
Why packs and memberships can change the real cost
Single-session pricing is useful when you are trying cryotherapy for the first time, but it does not always show the best-value route.
At Brysk, cryotherapy can be booked as a one-off session, a shared session, a package, or as part of a membership. This matters because recovery services are often used most effectively as part of a routine, especially during heavy training blocks, busy work periods, or ongoing recovery habits.
For example, Brysk’s whole body cryotherapy packs reduce the effective cost per solo session from £65 to as low as £32.50 depending on the pack size. Shared whole body cryotherapy packs can reduce the per-person cost further, with larger two-person packs lowering the effective per-person price.
Localised cryotherapy packs also reduce the effective session cost, from £45 as a single session to a lower per-session rate for regular use.
Memberships work differently again because they use core service credits. Depending on the membership tier and how credits are used, the effective cryotherapy session cost can work out lower than standard single-session pricing. This can make sense for people who want to combine cryotherapy with other Brysk services, such as red light therapy, compression boots, lymphatic drainage or hyperbaric oxygen.
The main point is simple: if you only look at the single-session price, you may not be comparing the best-value option.
What affects value beyond the headline price?
This is where headline price on its own stops being enough.
A cryotherapy session is not just priced on the cold itself. Value also comes from things like:
- The type of cryotherapy being delivered
- The equipment being used
- Whether the session is supervised
- Whether session length is handled properly
- Whether there are suitability checks before treatment
- Whether the environment feels controlled and well run
- Whether packs, shared sessions or memberships reduce the effective cost
Value also depends on how you plan to use cryotherapy. A one-off first session is different from a recovery routine. If you expect to use cryotherapy regularly, the lowest relevant price may be the effective package or membership rate rather than the single-session price.
That is especially important with whole body cryotherapy, where the price is not really about the few minutes spent inside the chamber alone. It is also about the equipment, preparation, supervision, safety checks, and the way the session is delivered around that short exposure.
For a clearer view of how that process works in practice, it also helps to read what happens before, during and after cryotherapy at Brysk.

Looking for cryotherapy in Manchester city centre?
If you are based in Manchester and trying to work out whether whole body or localised cryotherapy makes more sense, Brysk can help you decide before you book. A short conversation can help clarify whether whole body cryotherapy, localised cryotherapy, or another recovery service is the better fit.
Is cheaper cryotherapy always better value?
Not necessarily.
A cheaper session may still be perfectly fine. But lower price on its own does not tell you much unless you also understand what kind of cryotherapy is being delivered, how the session is supervised, and what is built around it.
That is why the better question is not just “what is the cheapest cryotherapy near me?” It is “what am I actually getting for the money?”
Cost matters, but only once you are comparing the right type of session in the first place.
Which type of cryotherapy may suit you best?
Whole body cryotherapy may make more sense if you want:
- A short, full-body cold exposure session
- A broader recovery or reset effect
- A more energising, systemic experience
- A shared session with a friend, partner or training partner
Localised cryotherapy may make more sense if you want:
- Targeted support for one area
- A more practical appointment for a specific joint or muscle
- Something more focused than a chamber session
- A directed cold-air option at around –32°C rather than direct-contact ice packing
If you are still unsure which route makes more sense overall, it can also help to look at how to choose the right Brysk session.
So, what does cryotherapy usually cost?
In simple terms:
- Whole body cryotherapy often sits somewhere between the high £30s and around £90 or more in the UK, depending on provider and region
- Localised cryotherapy is often lower, commonly around £30 to £45 or more where clearly priced
- Brysk currently offers whole body cryotherapy from £65 for one person, £90 for two people, and £105 for three people as single sessions, with packs and memberships available for regular users. Localised cryotherapy is £45 as a single session, with packs available to reduce the effective per-session cost.
That gives a more realistic picture of the market than treating every session as the same thing.
FAQs
Most people asking about cryotherapy cost want a simple sense of the range, what changes the price, and where whole body cryotherapy differs from localised treatment.
How much does cryotherapy usually cost in the UK?
Whole body cryotherapy often sits somewhere between the high £30s and around £90 or more for a single session, while localised cryotherapy is often around £30 to £45 or more where clearly priced.
How much does a cryo chamber session cost?
In the UK, a whole body cryo chamber session often sits somewhere between the high £30s and around £90 or more, depending on provider, region, equipment, and how the session is delivered.
At Brysk, single whole body cryotherapy sessions are £65 for one person, £90 for two people, and £105 for three people. Packs and memberships are also available for people who want to use cryotherapy regularly.
Is cryotherapy expensive?
Cryotherapy can feel expensive if you only compare it by session length, because whole body cryotherapy usually lasts just a few minutes. The cost reflects more than time in the chamber. It also includes the equipment, preparation, supervision, safety checks, studio environment, and how the session is delivered.
Does cryotherapy chamber cost mean the price of a session or the machine?
It can mean either, which is why the term is confusing. Some people use “cryotherapy chamber cost” to mean the price of booking a cryo chamber session, while others mean the cost of buying a cryotherapy machine. This guide focuses on session prices for people booking cryotherapy at a wellness or recovery studio.
Is cryotherapy more expensive in London?
Often yes. London whole-body pricing commonly sits higher than some North West examples currently visible online.
Why does whole body cryotherapy cost more than localised cryotherapy?
Because it is a different type of session with a chamber-based setup, broader delivery, and a different appointment structure.
How much does cryotherapy cost at Brysk?
Single whole body cryotherapy sessions are £65 for one person, £90 for two people, and £105 for three people. Localised cryotherapy is £45 as a single session. Packs and memberships are available for regular users and can reduce the effective per-session cost.
Why do cryotherapy prices vary so much between providers?
Because providers differ in the type of cryotherapy they offer, the equipment they use, how sessions are supervised, and whether they are using offers, memberships, or different pricing models.

Thinking about trying cryotherapy in Manchester?
Brysk offers both whole body and localised cryotherapy in Manchester city centre, with sessions designed to feel structured, supervised, and easy to fit around real life. If you are weighing up which type of cryotherapy sounds most appropriate, or want to understand how Brysk’s pricing fits into the wider picture, Brysk can help before you book.
Want a bit of guidance before you start?
Book a session or speak to the team if you’d like help choosing what feels right.
