- Cold hands and feet are very common, and in most cases they reflect normal thermoregulation rather than disease. For many people the problem is transient or weather-related and signals nothing of concern.
- When cold hands and feet come and go with the temperature, your mood, or the season, that pattern is reassuring. It is persistent, one-sided, or progressive coldness that is worth a closer look.
- If the problem is ongoing, the causes worth considering widen to include peripheral arterial disease, Raynaud’s phenomenon, an underactive thyroid, anaemia, diabetes, and certain medications, particularly beta-blockers.
- Peripheral arterial disease (PAD), narrowing of the arteries that supply the legs, can cause persistently cold feet, especially alongside leg pain on walking, skin colour changes, or slow-healing wounds.
- A small number of straightforward tests, a pulse check, an ankle-brachial pressure index, and a few blood tests, can usually sort the benign from the significant. Ongoing or worsening symptoms are worth discussing with your doctor.
Cold hands and feet are one of the most commonly reported symptoms in general practice, and one of the most frequently dismissed. “Poor circulation” is the phrase most patients are given, which is vague enough to cover everything from completely normal thermoregulation to significant arterial disease.
Here is the reassuring part, and it applies to most people reading this. Cold hands and feet are very often transient. They track the weather, the season, a cold office, a drop in activity, or even stress and tiredness. When that is the pattern, the coldness is the body behaving exactly as it should, and it points to nothing wrong with the heart or the circulation at all.
For some people, though, cold extremities are the first sign of a condition that shares the same underlying process as coronary artery disease, and deserves the same attention. The practical value of this article is knowing which pattern you are dealing with, and what to do if the coldness is ongoing rather than coming and going.
Why Extremities Feel Cold
Normal thermoregulation
The body’s first priority in cool conditions is maintaining its core temperature. The nervous system does this by narrowing the blood vessels in the skin and extremities, reducing blood flow to the periphery so that warm blood keeps circulating to the brain, heart, and other vital organs. This is a normal, healthy response, and the hands and feet are the first places to feel it because they are furthest from the core.
Some people are more prone to it than others: women more than men, those with a slimmer build, and people with naturally lower blood pressure. In these individuals, cold hands and feet are a constitutional feature, not a disease. They tend to be lifelong, symmetrical, and closely tied to the temperature around them.
When it is reassuring, and when it is worth a closer look
The pattern usually tells the story. Coldness that comes and goes with the weather, eases when you warm up, affects both sides equally, and has been with you for years is reassuring. It does not need investigation.
The picture changes when cold extremities are persistent rather than intermittent, are clearly worse on one side, are getting steadily worse over months, or arrive alongside other symptoms such as leg pain on walking, skin changes, or wounds that will not heal. That is the shift from normal thermoregulation to something worth exploring, and the rest of this article walks through the possibilities.
Peripheral Arterial Disease
What it is
Peripheral arterial disease is atherosclerosis, the same process of gradual plaque build-up that affects the coronary arteries, occurring instead in the arteries that supply the legs and feet. As these narrowings progress over time, blood flow to the lower limbs becomes increasingly limited.
PAD and coronary artery disease share the same risk factors: smoking, diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and a family history. The two conditions often coexist, which is why identifying PAD matters well beyond the legs themselves.
people over 65 have peripheral arterial disease, and most are unaware of it, often putting their symptoms down to ageing or general unfitness.
American Heart Association
Symptoms to be aware of
Cold feet in PAD usually come with other features that help separate it from ordinary cold sensitivity. Leg pain, cramping, or heaviness that comes on with walking and eases with rest, known as intermittent claudication, is a common feature of significant PAD. More advanced disease can cause pain in the foot or toes at night. Skin changes are also worth noting: pallor, shiny skin, loss of hair on the feet and lower legs, or wounds that are slow to heal. Any of these are worth bringing to your doctor’s attention.
Reduced or absent foot pulses in someone with cold feet, leg pain on walking, and a history of smoking or diabetes is worth investigating. It changes the cardiovascular risk conversation in an important way.
Prof. Peter Barlis, Interventional Cardiologist
Raynaud’s Phenomenon
Raynaud’s phenomenon is a different and very common condition. It is not fixed narrowing in the arteries but brief episodes of arterial spasm triggered by cold or emotional stress. The classic pattern is a sequence of colour changes in the fingers: they turn white as blood flow briefly stops, then blue as blood pools, then bright red as circulation returns. The episode is usually accompanied by numbness and tingling, and can feel uncomfortable as the fingers rewarm.
The reassuring news is that primary Raynaud’s, which occurs on its own without any underlying disease, is extremely common, more frequent in women, and in the large majority of cases entirely benign. Keeping the hands warm, avoiding sudden cold exposure, and managing stress are the main practical measures.
A less common form, secondary Raynaud’s, can occasionally be linked to connective tissue conditions. Features that might prompt your doctor to look further include a later age of onset, symptoms affecting only one hand, or associated joint pain or skin changes. If you have Raynaud’s and any of these apply, it is worth mentioning at your next appointment.
Other Causes Worth Considering
When cold hands and feet are ongoing rather than weather-related, it is worth remembering that the cause is often not the arteries at all. Several common, treatable conditions reduce peripheral warmth, and most are picked up with a simple blood test.
An underactive thyroid slows the whole metabolism and is one of the most frequent reasons for feeling cold all over, the hands and feet included, often with tiredness, weight gain, and dry skin alongside. Anaemia, where there are too few red cells to carry oxygen efficiently, can leave the extremities cold and pale and is common in women of menstruating age. Diabetes contributes in two ways, by affecting the small blood vessels and by causing nerve changes in the feet that alter how temperature is sensed. Smoking narrows blood vessels directly and is one of the most powerful and modifiable contributors of all. A naturally low body weight, low blood pressure, dehydration, and even anxiety, which diverts blood away from the skin, can all play a part.
None of these is a reason for alarm. They are listed here because they are common, they are easily tested for, and they respond well to treatment once identified.
Medications and the Heart
Sometimes the cause is not the arteries or the metabolism, but a medication. This is worth knowing, because it is common, often reversible, and easy to miss.
Beta-blockers, used widely in cardiovascular medicine for conditions including high blood pressure, heart failure, and recovery after a heart attack, can reduce blood flow to the hands and feet and make cold extremities noticeably worse. This is a known and recognised side effect, and it tends to be most noticeable in people who already have Raynaud’s or cold sensitivity. If your cold hands and feet started or became much worse after you began a beta-blocker, it is worth raising with your prescribing doctor. There are often alternatives, and your team will weigh the benefit of the medication against this side effect with you.
Reduced pumping power of the heart is a separate and more significant cause. In heart failure, the heart cannot maintain its normal output, and the body responds by diverting blood away from the skin and extremities to protect the vital organs. The result can be cold, pale, sometimes mottled hands and feet, usually as part of a broader picture that includes breathlessness, fatigue, and swelling of the ankles. Cold extremities on their own are not a sign of heart failure, but cold extremities alongside those other symptoms are worth prompt assessment.
| Feature | Normal / Raynaud’s | Peripheral Arterial Disease |
|---|---|---|
| Distribution | Both hands and feet symmetrically | Often worse in feet; may be asymmetric |
| Colour changes | White, blue, then red sequence (Raynaud’s) | Pallor or dusky discolouration, no rewarming flush |
| Pain with walking | Not typically | Leg cramping or heaviness with exertion |
| Skin changes | Normal skin | Shiny skin, hair loss, slow wound healing |
| Pulses | Normal | Reduced or absent foot and ankle pulses |
What Helps Day to Day
For the large majority of people, whose cold hands and feet are constitutional or weather-related, a few simple habits make a real difference. These measures are also the sensible first step while you arrange to have any ongoing symptoms checked.
Warm the core, not just the hands
The body warms the extremities last. A warm torso, a hat, and layered clothing do more for cold fingers and toes than gloves alone.
Keep moving
Regular activity improves circulation throughout the body. Even a short walk or wiggling the toes and fingers brings warmth back to cold extremities.
Avoid the triggers
Not smoking is the single most important step for circulation. Limiting caffeine and managing stress also help, as both can narrow small blood vessels.
When to See Your Doctor and What Tests to Expect
Cold hands and feet without any worrying features, in someone with no cardiovascular risk factors, normal skin, no leg pain on walking, and a lifelong weather-related pattern, generally do not need investigation. The day-to-day measures above are enough.
It is worth seeing your doctor when the coldness is persistent rather than intermittent, affects one side more than the other, is getting worse over time, or comes with leg pain on walking, skin changes, wounds that are slow to heal, or significant cardiovascular risk factors such as smoking, diabetes, or high blood pressure. The assessment is straightforward and usually involves no more than the following.
Your doctor will start by feeling the pulses in your feet and ankles, which gives an immediate sense of how well blood is reaching the lower limbs, and by examining the skin. An ankle-brachial pressure index, a painless test that compares the blood pressure reading at the ankle with the reading at the arm, gives a reliable picture of arterial flow to the legs and can be done at a routine appointment. A few blood tests are commonly arranged at the same time to check the thyroid, look for anaemia, and assess blood glucose. If Raynaud’s appears to be secondary rather than primary, your doctor may add an autoimmune blood screen or look at the small vessels at the base of the fingernails. Where PAD is suspected, an ultrasound scan of the leg arteries can map exactly where any narrowing lies.
- My cold hands and feet are ongoing rather than weather-related. Could they reflect reduced blood flow rather than normal cold sensitivity?
- Should I have my pulses checked and an ankle-brachial pressure index done?
- Could a thyroid problem, anaemia, or my blood sugar be contributing? Are those worth testing?
- My beta-blocker seems to have made my cold hands worse, is there an alternative worth considering?
- I have Raynaud’s, is there anything that suggests it could be related to an underlying condition?
- I have a wound on my foot that is not healing as expected, when should I have this assessed?
Heart Matters Resource
When in Doubt, Get Checked Out
Cold feet with leg pain on walking, skin changes, or a wound that is not healing as expected is worth a conversation with your doctor. Peripheral arterial disease is treatable when it is found early, and early assessment makes a real difference.
Conclusion
Cold hands and feet are usually benign, the body doing exactly what it is designed to do, putting core temperature ahead of peripheral comfort. For most people the explanation is constitutional or weather-related, the symptoms come and go, and no investigation is needed.
When the coldness is ongoing, one-sided, or worsening, or comes with leg pain, skin changes, or other symptoms, the list of causes widens to include peripheral arterial disease, an underactive thyroid, anaemia, diabetes, and medication effects, all of which are readily tested for and treatable. The line between cold feet that are normal and cold feet worth discussing is usually clear from the pattern. If you are not sure which side you fall on, that uncertainty is itself a good reason to ask.
