Sleep Calculator
Calculate optimal bedtime or wake-up time based on 90-minute sleep cycles.
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FAQs
What happens during each sleep stage?
Each 90-minute cycle contains: Stage 1 (light sleep, 5–10 min), Stage 2 (deeper light sleep, 20 min), Stage 3 (deep/slow-wave sleep, 30–40 min, most restorative), and REM sleep (20–25 min, dreaming, memory consolidation). Deep sleep dominates early in the night; REM sleep increases in later cycles.
How many sleep cycles do I need?
Most adults need 5–6 cycles (7.5–9 hours). 4 cycles (6 hours) can work short-term but leads to sleep debt over time. Teenagers need 9–10 hours. Older adults often naturally shift to earlier sleep and wake times and may get by with 4–5 cycles. Individual needs vary significantly.
Why does an alarm feel so jarring some mornings?
If an alarm interrupts deep sleep (Stage 3), you experience sleep inertia — grogginess, confusion, and impaired performance that can last 15–60 minutes. Waking naturally at the end of a cycle feels much better because you emerge from lighter sleep. Smart alarm apps use movement detection to wake you during the lightest sleep phase in a window around your target time.