Macroautophagy is a regulated bulk degradation process of cellular components, mainly long-lived proteins or cytoplasmic organelles. Nutrient depletion is a classic inducer of macroautophagy. In this report, we have induced heat-mediated macroautophagy in several cell lines in the absence of nutrient depletion. Heat treatment increased the autophagic markers LC3-I and LC3-II at the protein levels. Interestingly, expression of a constitutively active HSF1 mutant suppressed basal LC3-II protein level and heat-induced increase of LC3-II. Our results provide evidence that heat is a potent inducer of macroautophagy in mammalian cells, and implicate the negative role of active HSF1 in this process.