What makes thermal mineral water different from a heated pool
A heated pool is just warm water. A thermal mineral spring is groundwater that has traveled deep underground, been heated by volcanic activity, and dissolved minerals from the rock on its way back up — sulfur, calcium, magnesium, silica, and more. That combination of natural heat and mineral content is what balneotherapy (thermal-water therapy) has been built on for centuries, from Roman baths to Japanese onsen to Costa Rica’s volcanic springs.
Here are seven benefits of regular thermal bathing, and how to get the most from a soak.
1. Muscle and joint relief
Warm water raises tissue temperature and improves circulation, which helps muscles release tension. The buoyancy also takes load off joints — one reason thermal bathing is a long-standing complement for people with arthritis and chronic back tension.
2. Better circulation
Immersion in warm water gently dilates blood vessels. Alternating between hot pools and cooler water — easy to do where a resort has both hot and cold natural rivers — gives the circulatory system a workout without any effort on your part.
3. Deeper sleep
The post-soak temperature drop mimics the body’s natural pre-sleep cooling signal. An evening thermal bath is one of the simplest, most reliable sleep aids there is. Guests consistently report their best nights of sleep after a sunset soak.
4. Skin benefits
Mineral-rich water — particularly sulfur and silica — has a long history in the care of dry and irritated skin. Many bathers notice softer skin after a few days of regular soaking.
5. Stress relief you can feel
Warm-water immersion activates the parasympathetic nervous system — the “rest and digest” mode. Add rainforest sounds instead of city noise and the effect compounds. This is the core of why a spa-and-thermal-water retreat leaves people feeling genuinely reset rather than just rested.
6. Respiratory comfort
Warm, humid air around thermal pools can feel soothing for congested airways — one reason “taking the waters” was historically prescribed for respiratory complaints.
7. The ritual effect
Perhaps the most underrated benefit: a thermal soak forces you to do nothing. No phone, no scrolling, no multitasking — just heat, water, and time. In a wellness landscape full of gadgets, the oldest therapy is still one of the most effective.
How to soak safely
- Limit each session to 15–20 minutes, then cool off and hydrate.
- Alternate hot and cool water for the circulation benefits.
- Skip alcohol before soaking; drink water instead.
- If you’re pregnant or have a heart condition, check with your doctor first and stick to the warm (not hot) pools.
Experience the real thing
At El Tucano Resort & Thermal Spa, the thermal water isn’t piped in or reheated — a naturally hot mineral river flows through the rainforest property, feeding pools of different temperatures just steps from the rooms. Learn more on our thermal waters page, or check availability on the booking engine.

