AZ Tools

Sleep Cycle Calculator (90-min cycles)

Everyday

Sleep happens in ~90-minute cycles of light/deep/REM. Waking up at the *end* of a cycle (vs mid-deep-sleep) feels significantly easier and reduces grogginess. This calculator does the math for three scenarios: 'going to sleep now', 'I need to wake up at X', or 'I plan to go to bed at X'. Each candidate time shows how many cycles it gives you, with the 5–6 cycle range (7.5–9h) highlighted as the adult recommended sleep duration.

Now: 18:03

  • 22:47
    3 cycles4h 30m
  • 00:17
    4 cycles6h
  • 01:47Recommended
    5 cycles7h 30m
  • 03:17Recommended
    6 cycles9h

About 90-minute cycles

Sleep cycles are ~70–120 min (avg 90). Waking at cycle end vs mid-deep-sleep typically feels easier. 5–6 cycles (7.5–9h) is the adult recommendation.

How to use

  1. Pick a scenario: sleep now, wake up at X, or bedtime at X.
  2. Adjust the 'time to fall asleep' (default 14 min — the population average).
  3. Pick a candidate time. The highlighted rows fall in the recommended 7.5–9h range.

Frequently asked questions

Are sleep cycles really exactly 90 minutes?
It varies — 70 to 120 minutes per person, slightly longer later in the night. 90 is the population average and a useful planning heuristic, not a precision instrument.
Is waking after 5 cycles really better than 5.5?
Probably, for most adults — but individual variation is large. Try it for a week and see if shorter-but-aligned sleep feels better than longer-but-mid-cycle.
Why 14 minutes to fall asleep?
Sleep latency averages ~14 min for healthy adults (Hirshkowitz 2015). If you take longer (insomnia, screens, anxiety), bump this number — it just shifts every recommendation later.
What about naps?
20-min naps avoid deep sleep entirely (good for alertness). 90-min naps include one full cycle (good for memory/creativity). Anything between leaves you groggy.

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