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Sleep Calculator

What time should you go to bed — or wake up? This sleep calculator uses 90-minute sleep cycles to find the times that let you wake up between cycles, not in the middle of one, so you rise refreshed instead of groggy. Enter your wake-up time, or tap "sleep now," and get your ideal times in seconds.

Sleep Calculator

Choose what you want to work out, set the time, and we'll show cycle-aligned options. Each option is a full set of 90-minute sleep cycles plus the time it takes to fall asleep.

Recommended Times

All Cycle Options

* These times are based on the well-known model of 90-minute sleep cycles, aiming to have you wake between cycles rather than in the middle of deep sleep. Real cycles vary from about 90 to 110 minutes and differ from person to person and night to night, so treat these as helpful guides, not exact science. Most adults need 7–9 hours of sleep. If you regularly struggle to sleep, wake unrefreshed despite enough hours, or feel persistently tired, consider speaking with a doctor — this tool is for general information only and is not medical advice.

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What Is a Sleep Calculator?

A sleep calculator works out the best time to go to bed or wake up so you rise between sleep cycles instead of in the middle of one. Your sleep runs in repeating cycles of roughly 90 minutes, moving through light sleep, deep sleep, and REM. Wake up mid-cycle — especially during deep sleep — and you feel groggy and foggy. Wake at the end of a cycle and you feel refreshed, even on the same total hours.

This calculator answers the everyday questions: "what time should I go to bed?" if you know when you need to wake, and "what time should I wake up?" if you're heading to bed now. It works anywhere in the world — sleep science is the same everywhere.

How to Use This Sleep Calculator

  1. Pick your goal — find a bedtime, or find a wake-up time.
  2. Enter your time — the wake-up time you need, or choose "going to bed now."
  3. Set how long you take to fall asleep — about 15 minutes for most people.
  4. Optionally pick your age group — recommended sleep amounts differ by age.

Click Calculate Sleep Times to see your cycle-aligned options, with the best ones highlighted.

How Sleep Cycles Work

A full night isn't one long block of sleep — it's a series of cycles, each about 90 minutes long, repeated five to six times. Each cycle moves through stages:

  • Light sleep (N1, N2): the easy-to-wake stages that begin each cycle.
  • Deep sleep (N3): physically restorative; waking here causes the worst grogginess.
  • REM sleep: dreaming and memory consolidation, growing longer toward morning.

The goal is to time your alarm for the light stage at the end of a cycle, which is why completing whole cycles matters as much as total hours.

The Sleep Calculator Formula

Bedtime = wake-up time − (cycles × 90 min) − time to fall asleep

Example: wake at 6:30 AM, 5 cycles (7.5 hrs), 15 min to fall asleep
→ go to bed at 10:45 PM

To find a wake-up time instead, the calculator adds whole 90-minute cycles to the moment you fall asleep. Either way, it lists several options so you can pick the one that fits your schedule — usually aiming for 5 or 6 complete cycles (7.5 to 9 hours).

How Much Sleep Do You Need by Age?

Age GroupRecommended SleepSleep Cycles
Children (6–12)9–12 hours6–8 cycles
Teens (13–17)8–10 hoursabout 6 cycles
Adults (18–64)7–9 hours5–6 cycles
Older adults (65+)7–8 hoursabout 5 cycles

Why You Wake Up Tired Even After 8 Hours

It's a common puzzle: you sleep a full eight hours and still feel wrecked. The likely reason is that your alarm went off in the middle of a deep-sleep stage rather than at the end of a cycle. Eight hours isn't a whole number of 90-minute cycles (it's about 5.3), so you may be cutting a cycle short. Sleeping 7.5 hours (5 full cycles) or 9 hours (6 cycles) often leaves people feeling better than 8 — because the cycle finished. That's the whole idea behind timing your sleep.

Tips for Better Sleep

  • Keep a consistent schedule — same bedtime and wake time, even on weekends.
  • Wind down before bed — dim lights and screens in the last hour.
  • Watch caffeine — avoid it for several hours before sleeping.
  • Keep your room cool, dark, and quiet.
  • Get morning daylight — it anchors your body clock.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, completely free. No sign-up, no app download, no personal data stored. All calculations run locally in your browser.
To wake at 6 AM after 5 complete cycles, with about 15 minutes to fall asleep, you'd go to bed around 10:15 PM. For 6 cycles, around 8:45 PM. Enter 6:00 AM in the calculator to see all your options.
Choose the "going to bed now" option and the calculator adds 15 minutes to fall asleep, then full 90-minute cycles, and shows the best wake-up times — usually after 5 or 6 cycles.
A sleep cycle averages about 90 minutes but can range from 90 to 110 minutes. A full night is usually 5 to 6 cycles, which is roughly 7.5 to 9 hours of sleep.
You may be waking in the middle of a sleep cycle. Eight hours isn't a whole number of 90-minute cycles, so aiming for 7.5 hours (5 cycles) or 9 hours (6 cycles) often feels more refreshing because the cycle completes.
Yes. Sleep cycles are the same everywhere, so the calculator works for any country and time zone. It simply uses the clock times you enter.

👉 Want to understand sleep cycles, the best bedtime, and how to fix a broken sleep schedule? Read our complete guide on the blog.



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