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How Many Sleep Cycles Do You Actually Need?

A single sleep cycle — light sleep, deep sleep, then REM — takes about 90 minutes. Stack five to six of those back to back and you land in the 7.5 to 9 hour range that sleep researchers recommend for most adults.

Falling short of that isn't just about feeling tired. Two or three cycles a night, sustained over time, is linked to slower reaction time, weaker memory consolidation, and a measurably higher risk of long-term health issues, including cardiovascular strain.

The fix isn't only 'sleep more,' though — it's sleeping in whole cycles. Waking mid-cycle, especially during deep sleep, produces grogginess regardless of total hours. Use the calculator to work back from your wake-up time to a bedtime that lines up with a full cycle boundary.

Want to plan tonight's sleep? Use the sleep calculator.