22 minutes and 22 seconds
In 2012, German freediver Tom Sietas held his breath underwater for 22 minutes and 22 seconds, besting Dane Stig Severinsen’s previous Guinness record by 22 seconds. (Although Guinness still lists Severinsen as the record holder, stating he hyperventilated with oxygen before his attempt for 19 minutes and 30 seconds.)
How long did Aleix Segura hold her breath?
“Biggest Lungs Ever (male)” in static apnea with previous pure oxygen breathe up reaching 24 minutes and 3.45 seconds in an event broadcast on TV, during the Mediterranean Dive Show 2016, becoming the longest official breath hold ever at the moment.
What is the world record for holding your breath underwater 2018?
24 minutes and 11 seconds
Freediver Budimir Šobat already owned a world record that most people would deem untouchable, having held his breath underwater for 24 minutes and 11 seconds in February of 2018.
What is the world record of holding your breath under water?
That man, 39-year-old Stig Severinsen, just set a world record for holding his breath under water for a lung-burning 22 minutes. The record leaves the Denmark native’s previous underwater world-record performance of 20 minutes, 10 seconds, in the dust.
What is the world record for longest breath underwater?
Stig Severinsen has written a book called Breatheology which helps people find their ‘inner dolphin’ – a state of mind to help control breathing underwater. He also holds the record for the longest underwater swim, travelling 500ft (152m 40cm) in just two minutes and 11 seconds.
What is the longest holding breath underwater?
The Guinness World Record for the longest underwater breath-hold has just been shattered – Aleix Segura from Spain held his breath for 24 minutes 3 seconds, after breathing Oxygen as part of his breath-up, on February 28th 2016 at the 17th Mediterranean Dive Show in Barcelona.
What is the world record for a human holding there breath?
The longest time breath held voluntarily (male) is 24 min 37.36 sec, achieved by Budimir Šobat (Croatia), in Sisak, Croatia, on 27 March 2021. Budimir (Buda) attempted this record to promote the city of Sisak, after it was hit by a strong earthquake in December 2020. He surpassed the previous record by 34 seconds.