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A Sneeze at 100 MPH: The Explosive Mechanics of the Human Body's Fastest Reflex

March 28, 2026 ยท 4 min read

The Fact

A human sneeze can travel at speeds of up to 100 miles per hour.

For something that lasts less than a second, a sneeze is remarkably violent. The process begins in the nervous system and ends with an explosive expulsion of air from the lungs at speeds that, in the most forceful cases, approach 100 miles per hour. A single sneeze can release between 2,000 and 40,000 microscopic droplets, each potentially carrying infectious agents, in a spray that can reach six feet or more from the sneezer's face. The reflex that produces this event is ancient, elaborate, and, despite being something every person experiences hundreds of times in their life, still not fully understood.

What Triggers a Sneeze

The sneeze reflex is initiated in the trigeminal nerve โ€” the cranial nerve responsible for sensation across the face, including the nasal passages. When the nasal mucosa detects an irritant, whether a dust particle, an allergen, a pathogen, or even a sudden bright light (a phenomenon called the photic sneeze reflex, which affects roughly a third of the population), it sends signals along the trigeminal nerve to the sneeze center in the brainstem.

The brainstem coordinates a complex, precisely sequenced muscular response. First, the eyes close involuntarily (this is why you cannot sneeze with your eyes open โ€” the reflex closes them automatically). Then the tongue moves to the roof of the mouth, redirecting the air flow. The muscles of the chest wall, diaphragm, and abdomen contract powerfully to compress the lungs. Pressure builds rapidly inside the airways. Then the glottis (the opening of the voice box) opens suddenly, and the compressed air escapes in a high-velocity burst through the nose and mouth.

The Physics of the Spray

The 100-mile-per-hour figure represents the upper range of sneeze air velocities; the average is closer to 35 to 45 mph. But even at those lower velocities, the aerodynamics of the expelled air are remarkable. Research published in the Journal of Fluid Mechanics in 2014, using high-speed camera photography to visualize sneezes in detail, found that a sneeze does not simply release individual droplets โ€” it produces a multiphase turbulent gas cloud that carries the droplets together, dramatically extending their range and suspension time compared to what individual free-flying droplets could achieve.

That gas cloud can travel eight feet or more from the source, and the smallest droplets โ€” those under five microns in diameter โ€” can remain suspended in the air for minutes, drifting on air currents throughout an enclosed space. The larger droplets settle more quickly, landing on nearby surfaces and hands. This dual mechanism of transmission is one reason respiratory illnesses spread so effectively in indoor environments: sneezes deliver infectious material both as settled contamination on surfaces and as suspended airborne particles.

Why the Body Bothers

The violence of the sneeze is proportional to its function. The nasal passage is the front line of the respiratory immune system, and it is continuously filtering air for pathogens, allergens, and foreign particles. When the concentration of an irritant becomes high enough to trigger a response, or when the nasal mucosa detects the presence of a pathogen, a gentle clearing mechanism is insufficient. The body needs to expel the contents of the nasal passage rapidly and completely, and the explosive pressure of the sneeze accomplishes this more effectively than any slower mechanism could.

The involuntary nature of the reflex is also important. If sneezing required conscious initiation, humans might suppress it when socially inconvenient. By making it a brainstem reflex that bypasses conscious control, evolution ensured that the clearance happens when the body determines it needs to happen, regardless of social context. You can slow a sneeze or redirect it, but you cannot simply decide not to sneeze once the reflex is triggered โ€” and the 100-mph expulsion is the body making sure the job gets done.

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FactOTD Editorial Team

Published March 28, 2026 ยท 4 min read

The FactOTD editorial team researches and verifies every fact before publication. Our mission is to make learning effortless and accurate. Learn about our process โ†’

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