Sleep cycle calculator
Enter your wake-up time. We'll tell you the exact moments to fall asleep so you wake up between cycles — not inside one.
Ideal times to fall asleep tonight
Not all naps are equal. The length determines whether you wake refreshed or feel worse than before. Tap a type to see why.
The science
Every night, your brain cycles through distinct stages of sleep roughly every 90 minutes. Each cycle moves from light sleep → deep sleep → REM (dream sleep). The magic happens at the end of each cycle: your body naturally surfaces toward wakefulness for a brief moment.
If your alarm fires inside deep sleep, you feel like you were hit by a bus — that's called sleep inertia. But if it fires at the end of a cycle, you wake up feeling like you surfaced on your own. Same total hours. Completely different feeling.
Hover each bar — one 90-minute sleep cycle each
Is 90 minutes the same for everyone?
Close, but not exactly. Individual cycles range from 80–110 minutes. 90 minutes is the well-studied average. If you're still groggy at our suggested times, try shifting 10–15 minutes earlier or later to find your personal rhythm.
Why the 14-minute buffer?
Sleep latency — the time between lying down and actually falling asleep — averages 14 minutes in healthy adults. We subtract this so cycles are counted from when you're actually asleep, not when your head hits the pillow.
Is 4.5 hours really an option?
Three complete cycles is the absolute floor for functional sleep. It's not recommended regularly, but it's meaningfully better than 5 or 5.5 hours which would cut you off mid-cycle. Sometimes life happens and this is the real answer.
Does this replace a sleep doctor?
Absolutely not. This tool optimizes timing within healthy sleep. If you have insomnia, sleep apnea, or chronic fatigue, please speak to a healthcare provider. No calculator replaces clinical assessment.