Sleep Schedule

Your guide to healthy rest

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Sleep Calculator

🌅 Early Bird
😐 Normal
🦉 Night Owl

Your Schedule

Fill in the form to see your personalized sleep schedule with wind-down times and UTC equivalents.

🌍 Global Sleep Comparison

Average nightly sleep duration by country. Your region is highlighted in green. Yellow line = global average.

Sleep Architecture — A Full Night

Healthy sleep cycles through stages roughly every 90 minutes. Deep sleep (N3) dominates early; REM lengthens toward morning. Each stage serves a different restorative function.

Awake
REM (Dreaming)
N1 — Drowsy
N2 — Light Sleep
N3 — Deep Sleep

Awake

Brief awakenings at the end of cycles are normal and usually forgotten. Extended waking (>20 min) fragments sleep and reduces quality.

N1 — Drowsy

The transition into sleep. Brain activity slows, muscles relax, and hypnic jerks may occur. Very light — easily woken by sound or light.

N2 — Light Sleep

True sleep. Heart rate slows, body temperature drops. Sleep spindles help consolidate memory. Makes up roughly 50% of a night's sleep.

N3 — Deep Sleep

Slow-wave sleep. Physical restoration, immune function, and growth hormone release. Hardest to wake from. Responsible for feeling truly refreshed.

REM — Dreaming

Rapid Eye Movement. Vivid dreams, emotional processing, creativity, and long-term memory consolidation. Brain activity nearly matches waking levels.

🌅 Wind-Down Protocol

2 hours before bed

🔅 Dim the Lights

  • Reduce overhead lighting by 50%
  • Switch to warm amber or red-tinted lamps
  • Avoid bright white or blue-tinted lights
  • No more caffeine (ideally 6 h before bed)
  • Finish any high-intensity exercise for the day
90 minutes before bed

📵 Screen Sunset

  • Enable Night Shift / Night Mode on all devices
  • Reduce screen brightness to minimum
  • Finish urgent tasks — allow work to end
  • Light snack if hungry (avoid heavy meals)
  • Take a warm bath or shower
💡 A warm bath raises core temperature briefly — the subsequent cooling signals your body it's time to sleep.
1 hour before bed

📖 Quiet Time

  • Put away all screens (phone, TV, laptop)
  • Read a physical book or magazine
  • Gentle yoga or stretching
  • Brain dump: write tomorrow's tasks so they leave your head
  • Gratitude journaling
30 minutes before bed

🧘 Prepare Your Space

  • Set room temperature to 18–20 °C (65–68 °F)
  • Blackout curtains or sleep mask
  • 4-7-8 breathing: inhale 4 s, hold 7 s, exhale 8 s
  • Progressive muscle relaxation (tense + release each group)
  • No clock-watching — turn clock face away
Bedtime

🌑 Sleep Environment

  • Completely dark room
  • Phone face-down or in another room
  • White or pink noise if needed
  • Only use bed for sleep — this conditions your brain

💡 Blue Light & Your Brain

Blue light (~480 nm) suppresses melatonin — the hormone that signals it's time to sleep. Screens emit ~35% blue light.

📱 Even 2 hours of evening screen use can delay melatonin release by up to 90 minutes, pushing your sleep window later.

What to do:

  • 🌙 Use f.lux, Night Shift (iOS/macOS) or Night Light (Android/Windows)
  • 🕶️ Amber-tinted blue-blocking glasses in the evening
  • 🔅 Set all screens to minimum brightness after sunset
  • 📵 Ideally: no screens 60–90 min before bed

🌡️ Ideal Sleep Environment

🌡️

Temperature

65–68 °F (18–20 °C). Your body needs to drop ~1–2 °C to initiate and maintain sleep.

🌑

Darkness

Even dim light suppresses melatonin. Blackout curtains or a sleep mask are highly effective.

🔇

Noise

White or pink noise masks disruptive sounds. A fan, noise machine, or app works well. Earplugs also effective.

🛏️

Bed Association

Use your bed only for sleep and sex. This trains your brain to associate the bed with sleepiness.

😴 Trouble Falling Asleep?

Stimulus Control Therapy

One of the most evidence-backed treatments for insomnia:

  • Only go to bed when genuinely sleepy — not just tired
  • If not asleep in ~20 min, get up and do something quiet in dim light
  • Return to bed only when sleepy again — repeat as needed
  • Results improve noticeably within 1–2 weeks of consistency
  • Same wake time every day, including weekends

Cognitive Techniques

Anxiety about not sleeping often makes insomnia worse:

  • Challenge catastrophic thoughts ("I'll be destroyed tomorrow")
  • Cognitive defusion: observe thoughts without engaging them
  • Paradoxical intention: try to stay awake instead of forcing sleep
  • Mindfulness: focus on breath and body sensations, not the act of sleeping

Sleep Restriction (CBT-I)

For chronic insomnia, temporarily limiting time in bed consolidates sleep:

  • Track sleep for 1–2 weeks with a sleep diary
  • Limit time in bed to your average actual sleep time
  • As efficiency improves (>85%), extend bedtime by 15 min per week
  • Best done with a sleep therapist or CBT-I program

What to Avoid

  • Naps longer than 20–30 min, especially after 3 PM
  • Alcohol — disrupts REM and causes early awakening
  • Caffeine within 6 hours of bedtime
  • Heavy meals within 2–3 hours of bed
  • Intense exercise within 2 hours of bed
  • Looking at the clock when awake at night

🌛 Waking Up During the Night

🔍 Common Causes

Sleep apnea, stress, temperature, needing to urinate, noise, light, alcohol, anxiety, or simply surfacing at the end of a 90-minute cycle — which is normal.

⏰ Normal vs. Problem

Brief awakenings between cycles (~every 90 min) are normal and usually forgotten. It becomes a problem when you stay awake >20 min or feel unrefreshed every morning.

🛠️ In the Moment

Keep the room cool and dark. Don't look at the clock. If awake >20 min, get up briefly to a dim room. Write down any worries to address tomorrow.

🗓️ Adjusting Your Schedule for Fragmented Sleep

Keep a 2-week sleep diary Note bedtime, estimated sleep onset, number of awakenings, final wake time, and morning restfulness score. Look for patterns — time of night, weekday vs. weekend, stress.
Calculate your sleep efficiency Divide actual sleep time by time in bed × 100%. Below 85% = your sleep window may be too long. Above 90% = you may need more time in bed.
Consolidate your schedule If efficiency is low, delay bedtime by 15–30 min while keeping the same wake time. This increases sleep pressure and reduces fragmented waking.
Anchor your wake time A consistent wake time is the most powerful tool for circadian rhythm stability. Even after a bad night — get up at the same time. Sleep debt makes the next night better.
Add morning bright light Natural light within 30–60 min of waking resets your circadian clock. Even 10 minutes outdoors is meaningful. This helps shift your sleep window to the right time.
⚕️ When to see a doctor: If sleep problems have persisted for more than 3 months, you experience excessive daytime sleepiness, snore loudly or stop breathing during sleep, or poor sleep is significantly impacting daily life — see a healthcare provider or sleep specialist. Conditions like sleep apnea and restless legs syndrome are very treatable.