How to Sleep Better at Night: 7 Science-Backed Steps
Slug: how-to-sleep-better-at-nightPillar: Health and Fitness > WellnessKeyword: how to sleep better at night tipsExcerpt: Poor sleep affects your mood, health and focus. These seven science-backed steps will help you fall asleep faster and wake up genuinely rested.
Sleep is no longer just a health recommendation — in 2026, it has been firmly established as one of the most powerful levers for physical health, mental performance, emotional regulation and longevity. The Global Wellness Summit identified sleep optimisation as a top wellness trend for this year. Research consistently shows that most adults are sleeping fewer than the recommended seven to nine hours, with significant consequences for everything from immune function to cardiovascular health.
Note: This article is for general wellness guidance. If you suspect you have a sleep disorder such as insomnia, sleep apnoea or restless leg syndrome, please consult a GP or sleep specialist. This article does not replace professional medical advice.
Why Most Sleep Advice Fails
Generic advice to go to bed earlier rarely sticks because it ignores the underlying science of sleep. Better sleep is not just about what you do in the hour before bed — it is the result of habits and choices made throughout the entire day.
Step 1: Anchor Your Wake Time, Not Your Bedtime
Sleep scientists recommend fixing your wake time first — setting an alarm for the same time every morning, including weekends, regardless of when you went to bed. This anchors your circadian rhythm far more effectively than a consistent bedtime, and within one to two weeks, you will naturally feel sleepy at the right time in the evening.
Step 2: Get Bright Light in the Morning
Within 30 to 60 minutes of waking, go outside or sit near a bright window for at least ten minutes. Morning light suppresses lingering melatonin and triggers hormonal signals that make you feel more awake during the day and sleepier at the right time at night. On dark mornings, a 10,000-lux light therapy lamp used for 20 to 30 minutes is an excellent substitute.
Step 3: Manage Your Caffeine Window
Caffeine has a half-life of five to seven hours in most adults, meaning half of the caffeine in your afternoon coffee is still circulating at 10pm if you drank it at 2pm. Sleep researcher Matthew Walker recommends cutting off caffeine by 12 to 1pm if you want to be asleep by 10 to 11pm. Switching to decaf or herbal tea in the afternoon is the single most impactful dietary change many poor sleepers make.
Step 4: Keep Your Bedroom Cool
Your body temperature needs to drop by approximately one to two degrees Celsius to initiate and maintain sleep. The optimal bedroom temperature for sleep is between 16°C and 19°C for most adults. A warm bath or shower 60 to 90 minutes before sleep actually helps because it draws heat away from the body's core, accelerating the core temperature drop needed for sleep onset.
Step 5: Reduce Evening Light Exposure
Bright, blue-spectrum light in the evening delays melatonin production by up to two to three hours. Two to three hours before your target bedtime, dim overhead lights and switch to warm, low lamps. If you use screens in the evening, enable night mode and consider blue-light-blocking glasses.
Step 6: Build a Wind-Down Ritual
Your brain cannot switch instantly from high alertness to sleep. A consistent 30 to 60 minute wind-down routine signals to your nervous system that sleep is approaching. Reading a physical book, gentle stretching, journalling, or a warm bath all work. Avoid email, stressful news, difficult conversations, or competitive video games in the hour before bed.
Step 7: Address Anxiety and Racing Thoughts
For many poor sleepers, the primary problem is psychological: an inability to switch off from worries at bedtime. A daily worry dump — writing down all anxieties and to-do items 60 to 90 minutes before bed, closing the notebook, and mentally placing them outside the bedroom — is highly effective. Cognitive shuffling, imagining a random sequence of unconnected images as you fall asleep, prevents the narrative thinking that keeps the brain alert.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many hours of sleep do adults actually need?
The National Sleep Foundation recommends seven to nine hours for adults aged 18 to 64. The idea that you can train yourself to need less sleep is not supported by evidence. Most people who believe they function well on five to six hours are chronically sleep-deprived and adapted to the feeling of it.
Does the 90-minute sleep cycle rule actually matter?
Sleep does occur in roughly 90-minute cycles. Waking at the end of a cycle makes you feel more refreshed. A consistent daily wake time will naturally align your cycles over time, which is more reliable than attempting to time your alarm to a cycle.
Are sleep supplements like melatonin worth taking?
Melatonin is most useful for shift workers and jet lag — shifting the timing of sleep rather than improving its quality or depth. For most people with chronic poor sleep, the behavioural changes described above produce more significant improvements than supplementation. Always consult a GP before starting any supplement.
What should I do if I wake up in the night and cannot get back to sleep?
If you cannot return to sleep within 20 minutes, get up, go to another room, do something calm in dim light until you feel genuinely sleepy, then return to bed. This technique — part of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) — is the most evidence-based treatment for chronic insomnia, more effective than sleep medication.
Does exercise improve sleep?
Yes, significantly. Even 20 to 30 minutes of brisk walking daily improves sleep quality, reduces the time taken to fall asleep, and increases the proportion of deep sleep. Morning or afternoon exercise is generally preferable — vigorous exercise within two hours of bedtime can delay sleep onset in some individuals.
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