Calculate This Body · Sleep
Module · Body

Sleep
Cycle

Best times to fall asleep or wake up based on 90-minute sleep cycles - to avoid waking mid-cycle and starting the day groggy.

Cycle length
~90 minutes

Falling asleep
~14 minutes avg

Ideal cycles
5 – 6 per night
Calculate from
Time
Cycle settings
Recommended times -

The theory

A single sleep cycle takes about 90 minutes. Your body progresses through stages of lighter and deeper sleep, ending each cycle in REM (rapid eye movement) sleep - the dream-heavy stage that completes a cycle.

Most adults complete 4-6 cycles per night. Waking up during deep sleep produces sleep inertia: that thick-headed feeling that can last 15-30 minutes. Waking between cycles, during light sleep or just after REM, you feel rested even on less total sleep.

target_bedtime = wake_time − (cycles × 90 min) − fall_asleep_time

Frequently asked

Is the 90-minute rule actually true?

Sort of. 90 minutes is the average; individual cycles range 70-120 minutes and even vary across a single night. The "wake between cycles" idea has real biological basis, but the specific math is approximate. Cycle-tracking apps using accelerometers in your phone do a better job than time-only math.

Does going to bed at the right time matter more than total sleep?

Both matter. Total sleep matters more for long-term health. Cycle alignment matters more for morning grogginess. Hitting both - adequate total sleep ending between cycles - is the ideal.

What about naps?

A 20-minute power nap stays in light sleep - refreshing without grogginess. A 90-minute nap completes a full cycle - also refreshing. Any nap between 30-80 minutes risks waking mid-cycle, which is why so many naps leave people feeling worse.