Sleep Calculator
Find the best time to wake up or go to sleep based on natural 90-minute sleep cycles — wake up feeling refreshed, not groggy.
About the Sleep Calculator
Getting enough sleep isn’t just about the number of hours — it’s about waking up at the right point in your sleep cycle. This Sleep Calculator uses the science of sleep cycles to help you find the ideal bedtime or wake-up time so you feel alert and refreshed, not groggy and disoriented.
How Sleep Cycles Work
Sleep is not a single continuous state. Your body moves through repeating cycles of light sleep, deep sleep, and REM (rapid eye movement) sleep throughout the night. Each complete cycle takes approximately 90 minutes. Most adults need between 4 and 6 complete cycles per night — that’s 6 to 9 hours of sleep.
The key insight is this: waking up mid-cycle leaves you feeling groggy and disoriented, a phenomenon known as sleep inertia. Waking up at the natural end of a cycle — when you are in lighter sleep — means you feel alert and ready almost immediately.
How This Calculator Works
You choose one of two modes. In Wake-up mode, you enter the time you need to be awake, and the calculator counts back in 90-minute increments to show you the best times to fall asleep tonight. In Bedtime mode, you enter the time you plan to go to bed, and the calculator counts forward to show you the best times to set your alarm.
Both modes also account for the average time it takes to fall asleep — about 14 minutes for most adults — so the suggested times reflect when you should actually get into bed, not just when sleep begins.
How Many Sleep Cycles Do You Need?
- 6 cycles (9 hours): Ideal for recovery, illness, or particularly exhausting days.
- 5 cycles (7.5 hours): The sweet spot for most adults — fully restorative sleep.
- 4 cycles (6 hours): Acceptable short-term but not recommended as a habit.
- 3 cycles (4.5 hours): Minimum — expect reduced cognitive performance and energy.
What Is Sleep Inertia?
Sleep inertia is the groggy, disoriented feeling you get when you wake up in the middle of a deep sleep stage. It can last anywhere from a few minutes to over an hour and significantly impairs memory, reaction time, and decision-making. By timing your wake-up to coincide with the end of a cycle, you minimise sleep inertia and wake up feeling much more alert.
REM Sleep and Why It Matters
REM sleep — which happens mostly in the later cycles of the night — is critical for memory consolidation, emotional processing, and creativity. Cutting sleep short, even by an hour, can disproportionately reduce the amount of REM sleep you get, which is why early alarms often leave you feeling mentally foggy even after what seems like enough hours.