Sleep occurs in 90-minute cycles. Waking at the end of a cycle feels refreshed; waking mid-cycle triggers hours of grogginess. This calculator finds the optimal alarm times for you.
Sleep stages, needs by age, and the science of getting quality rest.
| Age Group | Recommended Hours | Cycles | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Children (3โ13 years) | 9โ11 hours | 6โ7 cycles | Critical for growth and learning |
| Teenagers (14โ17) | 8โ10 hours | 5โ6 cycles | Later natural circadian rhythm |
| Adults (18โ64) | 7โ9 hours | 5โ6 cycles | Most common recommendation |
| Older Adults (65+) | 7โ8 hours | 4โ5 cycles | Earlier circadian rhythm shift |
| Stage | Type | Duration | What Happens | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stage 1 | Light NREM | 1โ7 min | Transition from wakefulness | Entry point to sleep |
| Stage 2 | Light NREM | 10โ25 min | Heart rate slows; memory consolidation begins | Largest % of sleep |
| Stage 3 | Deep NREM (SWS) | 20โ40 min | Growth hormone released; tissue repair | Physical restoration |
| Stage 4 | Deep NREM (SWS) | 20โ40 min | Immune function boosted; memory consolidated | Immune & physical repair |
| Stage 5 | REM | 10โ60 min | Dreaming; emotional processing; learning | Mental & emotional health |
Sleep occurs in cycles of approximately 90 minutes. This calculator adds your estimated sleep latency (time to fall asleep) to determine when complete cycles end, giving you the ideal alarm times. Both "sleep at a time" and "wake at a time" modes are supported.