How long is a sleep cycle, really?
You will see "90 minutes" everywhere, including on this site. It is a good number to plan around. It is also an average, and treating it as a fixed law is where a lot of sleep advice quietly goes wrong.
A sleep cycle is one full pass through the stages of sleep: from light onset, down into deep sleep, up into REM, and back toward the surface before the next pass begins. The popular figure for how long that takes is 90 minutes, and for a typical adult, planning in 90-minute blocks works well. But the honest range is wider. Individual cycles run roughly 70 to 120 minutes, and they are not even consistent within a single night.
What a single cycle contains
Sleep scientists divide a cycle into four stages: three non-REM stages (N1, N2, N3) and REM. N1 is the brief drift-off as you lose awareness. N2 is light sleep and makes up the largest share of the night, close to half of total sleep. N3 is deep, slow-wave sleep, the stage that feels almost impossible to be woken from. REM is where most vivid dreaming happens and the brain is strikingly active. Across a whole night, about three quarters of your sleep is non-REM.
Cycles change as the night goes on
The mix inside a cycle shifts hour by hour. Your first cycles are heavy on deep N3 sleep, which is why the early part of the night is so restorative and so hard to wake from. As the night continues, deep sleep shrinks and REM grows. The first REM period might last only ten minutes; the final one, just before your natural wake time, can stretch close to an hour. So a cycle near morning looks very different from a cycle near midnight, even though we give them the same average length.
Why the range is 70 to 120 minutes, not exactly 90
Cycle length varies between people and within the same person depending on age, how sleep-deprived you are, alcohol, and stress. Children's cycles are shorter; they lengthen through early childhood, reaching roughly adult length by around age five. After a few short nights, your body front-loads deep sleep to catch up, which changes the shape of your early cycles. None of this makes the 90-minute estimate useless; it just means the right way to use it is as a strong starting point you can adjust, not a stopwatch.
This is exactly why the sleep calculator includes a Fine-tune panel. If you have tracked your sleep and know your cycles run closer to 100 minutes, change the cycle length and every suggested time updates with it.
How many cycles in a night?
Most adults complete four to six full cycles a night. Five to six, roughly seven and a half to nine hours, is the comfortable range for most people. Four cycles, around six hours, is survivable for a night but not a sustainable habit. The point of timing your sleep is not to cut cycles; it is to land your wake-up at the end of one rather than the middle, so you rise from light sleep instead of being dragged out of deep sleep.
How to use this number
Plan in 90-minute blocks, count on four to six of them, add about 15 minutes to fall asleep, and aim your alarm at a cycle boundary. Then hold the result loosely. If you consistently wake a little before or after the calculator's suggestion feeling great, that is your own cycle length talking, and you should trust it over the average.
Sources: Sleep Foundation, Sleep Cycle, NIH StatPearls, Physiology of Sleep Stages, and NINDS, Brain Basics: Understanding Sleep.