Sleep Hygiene Checklist: 10 Steps to a Better Night's Sleep
Sleep hygiene refers to the everyday habits and environment that either support or undermine good sleep. None of these steps are dramatic on their own, but stacked together they make it noticeably easier to fall asleep quickly and stay asleep through full cycles.
1. Keep a consistent bedtime and wake time, including weekends. This is the single biggest lever for sleep quality — it keeps your circadian rhythm predictable, which makes falling asleep and waking up both easier.
2. Get daylight exposure early in the day, ideally within an hour of waking. Morning light helps anchor your circadian rhythm and makes it easier to feel sleepy at the right time that night.
3. Dim lights and reduce screen brightness for the last 30–60 minutes before bed. Bright light, especially blue-heavy light from screens, suppresses the release of melatonin, the hormone that signals it's time to sleep.
4. Keep the bedroom cool, dark, and quiet. A cooler room (around 18–20°C / 65–68°F for most people) supports the natural drop in body temperature that accompanies falling asleep.
5. Avoid caffeine within 6–8 hours of bedtime. Caffeine's half-life is long enough that an afternoon coffee can still be measurably affecting sleep onset that night.
6. Avoid large meals and alcohol close to bedtime. Alcohol can make you fall asleep faster but fragments sleep later in the night, cutting into REM sleep specifically.
7. Get regular physical activity, but not intensely right before bed. Exercise supports deeper sleep overall, though a vigorous workout in the hour before bed can leave some people too alert to wind down.
8. Reserve the bed for sleep (and rest), not work or scrolling. This strengthens the mental association between your bed and sleep, making it easier for your body to switch into sleep mode there.
9. Build a short, repeatable wind-down routine — reading, stretching, or a consistent set of steps each night signals to your brain that sleep is coming.
10. Use a cycle-based bedtime instead of a round number of hours. Working back from your wake-up time in whole 90-minute blocks, as this site's calculator does, gives you a better chance of waking up near the end of a cycle rather than in the middle of deep sleep.
Want to plan tonight's sleep? Use the sleep calculator.