Sleep Guide
Best Bedtime Routine
Build a simple bedtime routine that supports sleep instead of making it complicated.
Stress and mental activation
Short answer
The best bedtime routine is short, repeatable, low-stimulation, and starts before you are already desperate to sleep.
Take the Sleep AssessmentWhat this means
This pattern often happens when the brain remains alert at bedtime because of worry, planning, frustration, or tension.
Common causes
- Racing thoughts
- Bedtime worry or planning
- Pressure to fall asleep quickly
- Conditioned wakefulness in bed
What to do next
- Move planning and problem-solving earlier in the evening.
- Use a short, repeatable wind-down routine.
- Avoid turning bedtime into a performance test.
Keep it simple
A routine that is too elaborate becomes another task. Aim for something you can repeat most nights.
This type of sleep pattern is common and often develops gradually. Many people respond by trying to fix sleep directly, but changes in timing, behavior, and expectations around sleep are often more effective.
The key is to focus on consistent signals to the body rather than isolated “sleep hacks”. Sleep is usually an outcome of the right conditions, not something that can be forced.
Reduce stimulation
Dim light, lower cognitive load, and avoid work-like tasks in the final part of the evening.
This type of sleep pattern is common and often develops gradually. Many people respond by trying to fix sleep directly, but changes in timing, behavior, and expectations around sleep are often more effective.
The key is to focus on consistent signals to the body rather than isolated “sleep hacks”. Sleep is usually an outcome of the right conditions, not something that can be forced.
Use a sleep tool
Tools work best when they match your actual sleep pattern. Start with assessment if you are unsure.
How long does this take to improve?
Sleep problems rarely resolve overnight. Most people see gradual improvement over days to weeks when the main pattern is addressed consistently.
- Sleep timing changes: often 3–7 days
- Insomnia-type patterns: often 2–4 weeks
- Stress-related sleep: varies depending on underlying factors
Trying multiple strategies at once often makes it harder to see what actually works. A simple, consistent approach is usually more effective.
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