DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 1.49 MB)
Taking Hot Showers on Shabbat or Yom Tob

The Shulhan Aruch (Siman 326) brings the Halacha that on Shabbat it is prohibited to bathe with hot water, even if it was heated before Shabbat. This Halacha is known as "Gezerat Merhasa’ot"-the decree of bathhouses. Therefore, one may not shower with hot water on Shabbat, even if he has hot water in his boiler from before Shabbat, and no cold water would enter the boiler.

However, Rabbi Akiva Eger (1761-1837) rules that if a person is "Mistaer"-suffering discomfort, even if he is not ill, he may bathe with water heated before Shabbat, as long as no water becomes indirectly heated on Shabbat; i.e. the cold water intake must be closed. Hacham Bension (Or Lesion 2:33) uses this principle to justify those who immerse in a hot Mikveh on Shabbat. Since they are used to going every day, they would suffer from missing Mikveh on Shabbat, and therefore they can bathe in the hot water which was heated before Shabbat.

Hacham Natan Ben-Senyar in his sefer Ner Sion, Hilchot Yom Tob, p.316 applies this leniency to someone who suffers without a hot shower on Yom Tob. He permits taking a hot shower even with water heated in a permitted fashion on Yom Tob. This is particularly applicable to a "three day Yom Tob" where people can get very hot and uncomfortable by the second day and would suffer if they would have to enter Shabbat without a shower. The fact that cold water will enter the boiler is less of a problem on Yom Tob, as one can rely on Hacham Ovadia’s arguments to be lenient. Even Hachamim, such as Hacham Baruch, that are generally strict regarding showering on Yom Tob, are more lenient in cases of three day holidays. Some would permit showering only in tepid water.


SUMMARY

On Shabbat, showering in hot water heated from before Shabbat is prohibited, unless one suffers and can close the flow of cold water into the boiler. Someone who will suffer without immersing in a Mikveh on Shabbat, may immerse in a hot Mikveh.

On Yom Tob, there is room to be lenient and allow showering in hot water heated in a permissible fashion on Yom Tob for someone who suffers from discomfort.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Power of Speech
The Importance of Learning during the Summer
Respecting One’s Father When He Visits on Shabbat
Must One Stand for His Rabbi or Parent While he Studies Torah, Prays or Recites Birkat Ha’mazon?
When Must One Stand in His Parent’s Presence?
Standing Up for a Parent Who is One’s Student
Standing in the Presence of One’s Parent
Laws Pertaining to Meals: Etiquette for Guests and Hosts, and Torah Scholars Eating with an Am Ha’aretz
Are There Restrictions on Whom a Female Kohen May Marry?
If a Kohen Marries a Woman Forbidden for Him
May a Kohen Fly on a Plane That is Carrying a Dead Body?
May a Kohen Visit the Gravesite of a Sadik?
May a Doctor Who is a Kohen Perform Biopsies or be in the Same Room as Body Parts From a Living Person?
May a Non-Kohen Bless Somebody With Birkat Kohanim?
Reciting the Verse of “Vi’yhi Noam” Before Praying or Performing a Misva
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found