The best bedtime to wake up at 6 AM

To wake up at 6:00 AM feeling clear rather than crushed, aim to be in bed around 8:45 PM (six cycles), 10:15 PM (five cycles), or 11:45 PM (four cycles). Here is why those exact times, and the same math for other alarms.

The reasoning in one paragraph

A sleep cycle averages about 90 minutes, and you feel best waking at the end of one, in light sleep, rather than mid-cycle in deep sleep. To land your 6 AM alarm on a cycle boundary, you count backward in 90-minute blocks and add roughly 15 minutes for the time it takes to actually fall asleep. Six cycles back from 6 AM, plus the buffer, is 8:45 PM. Five cycles is 10:15 PM. Four is 11:45 PM. Pick the latest one you can still get enough total sleep from: six cycles (nine hours) is the fullest, five (seven and a half) is the sweet spot for most adults, and four (six hours) is the lean option for a late night.

Want it for a different minute, like 6:20 or 5:45? The sleep calculator does the arithmetic instantly and lets you change the cycle length and fall-asleep buffer to match your own body.

Bedtime table for common wake times

All times assume 90-minute cycles plus a 15-minute buffer to fall asleep. The five and six cycle rows are the ones to favor for a normal adult night.

Wake time6 cycles (9h)5 cycles (7.5h)4 cycles (6h)
5:00 AM7:45 PM9:15 PM10:45 PM
5:30 AM8:15 PM9:45 PM11:15 PM
6:00 AM8:45 PM10:15 PM11:45 PM
6:30 AM9:15 PM10:45 PM12:15 AM
7:00 AM9:45 PM11:15 PM12:45 AM
7:30 AM10:15 PM11:45 PM1:15 AM
8:00 AM10:45 PM12:15 AM1:45 AM

Which row should you pick?

Start from how much sleep you actually need, then choose the bedtime that delivers it on a cycle boundary. Most adults do best on the five or six cycle rows. Use the four-cycle row only for the occasional short night, not as a routine. If you are a teenager you generally need more sleep, so lean to the six-cycle row; if you are an older adult, five cycles is often plenty. Our sleep needs by age guide breaks this down.

Make the bedtime stick

A calculated bedtime only works if you are actually asleep near it. Dim the lights an hour before, keep your phone out of the bed, and keep your wake time consistent so your body learns the rhythm. If 8:45 PM feels impossible tonight, the five-cycle 10:15 PM is a perfectly good night; the goal is the cycle boundary, not heroics.

Sources: Sleep Foundation, Sleep Cycle and NIH StatPearls, Physiology of Sleep Stages.

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