Sleep Cycle Calculator
Find the best time to go to bed or wake up, based on 90-minute adult sleep cycles, so you wake up at the end of a cycle and feel refreshed instead of groggy.
Your suggested times
| Time | Cycles | Total sleep | Quality |
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Adults cycle through light, deep and REM sleep roughly every 90 minutes. Waking up at the end of a cycle — in lighter sleep — feels easier than waking up mid-cycle.
This calculator is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your diet, exercise, or health regimen.
What is a sleep cycle and why does it matter?
Sleep is not a single uniform state. Over the course of a night your brain moves through a repeating sequence of stages known as a sleep cycle. Each cycle contains light non-REM sleep (stages N1 and N2), deep slow-wave sleep (N3), and rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep. In healthy adults one complete cycle averages about 90 minutes, and a typical night contains four to six of them.
The reason this matters is simple: how rested you feel in the morning depends less on raw hours of sleep and more on which stage you wake up in. If your alarm fires during deep N3 sleep you will feel groggy, disoriented, and sluggish — a phenomenon sleep scientists call sleep inertia. If you wake naturally at the end of a cycle, when the brain is already in light sleep or brief wakefulness, the transition to being awake is smooth.
How this calculator works
Enter either the time you want to wake up or the time you plan to go to bed. The calculator then works backwards (or forwards) in 90-minute increments to suggest times that land at the end of a complete cycle. We also add 14 minutes to account for the average adult sleep-onset latency — the time it takes to actually fall asleep after lying down — so that the bedtimes you see are "lights out" times rather than "brain already asleep" times.
The 90-minute cycle length comes from classical sleep research summarised by Carskadon and Dement in Principles and Practice of Sleep Medicine and is the standard figure used by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Individual cycles vary from roughly 70 to 120 minutes depending on age, genetics, caffeine, alcohol, and recent sleep debt, so treat the output as a close approximation, not a prescription.
The 14-minute sleep-onset latency comes from a large meta-analysis by Ohayon and colleagues that found normal healthy adults take 10 to 20 minutes to fall asleep, with a mean close to 14 minutes.
Worked example
Suppose you need to wake up at 07:00 and you want an ideal night's sleep. The calculator looks at six 90-minute cycles — that is 540 minutes or 9 hours of actual sleep — and adds the 14-minute fall-asleep allowance. So it subtracts 554 minutes from 07:00, giving a recommended bedtime of 21:46. If you only have time for five cycles (7.5 hours of sleep, a solid night for most adults), the bedtime shifts to 23:16. Four cycles (6 hours, the functional minimum for most people) puts you at 00:46. Three cycles (4.5 hours, emergency only) lands at 02:16.
For the opposite direction, if you know you will be in bed at 22:30, add 14 minutes of fall-asleep time and you are asleep at 22:44. Adding six cycles (540 min) puts your alarm at 07:44; five cycles at 06:14; four cycles at 04:44.
How to interpret the suggested times
The calculator labels each suggestion by how much sleep it gives you:
- Ideal — 6 cycles (9 hours): What adults should aim for on any night they can. Best recovery, best cognitive performance the next day.
- Good — 5 cycles (7.5 hours): The sweet spot for most adults on a workday. Within the 7–9 hour recommendation of the National Sleep Foundation.
- Minimum — 4 cycles (6 hours): Below the recommended range but workable for short periods. Chronic 6-hour nights are linked to impaired attention, weight gain, and cardiovascular risk.
- Last resort — 3 cycles (4.5 hours): Emergency only. Do not make this a habit. Performance is significantly impaired after a single short night and cumulative debt builds quickly.
Common mistakes
- Ignoring fall-asleep time. If you set your alarm exactly 7.5 hours after climbing into bed you have only slept 7 hours 16 minutes, plus whatever time you spent scrolling your phone.
- Assuming your cycles are exactly 90 minutes. Cycles vary by individual and by night. If you consistently wake up groggy at the suggested times, try shifting your bedtime by 10–15 minutes and experiment.
- Using this as a license to sleep less. Waking up at the end of a cycle does not make five hours of sleep equivalent to eight. Short sleep is still short sleep.
- Napping into the awkward middle. A 45-minute nap drops you into deep sleep without completing a cycle — the worst of both worlds. Nap for 20 minutes or a full 90.
- Over-relying on one tool. If you have chronic insomnia, restless legs, snoring, or excessive daytime sleepiness, a calculator cannot fix the underlying problem.
When to consult a sleep professional
Occasional grogginess is normal. Persistent sleep problems are not. Speak to a doctor or a board-certified sleep specialist if you regularly struggle to fall asleep or stay asleep, snore loudly or stop breathing in your sleep (a possible sign of sleep apnoea), feel unrefreshed no matter how many hours you spend in bed, or experience excessive daytime sleepiness that interferes with work, driving, or daily life. Sleep disorders are common, treatable, and should not be managed with bedtime math alone.