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Why You Can Still Wake Up Tired After 8 Hours

Eight hours is a reasonable target, but it doesn't always divide evenly into 90-minute cycles — leaving you to wake up in the middle of one, often during deep sleep, which is when grogginess (sleep inertia) is strongest.

Consistency matters too: an irregular bedtime shifts where your cycles land relative to your alarm, so the same 8 hours can feel different night to night.

Small adjustments — moving bedtime 15–30 minutes earlier or later — can shift your wake-up to land closer to a natural cycle boundary. The calculator's cycle-based results are built to help you find that window.

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