How much sleep do you need?
Most adults need 7 to 9 hours of sleep a night. That is the consensus across the major sleep bodies, but the right number for any one person varies, and the honest way to find yours is to observe your own body rather than trust a single rule.
The "eight hours" figure you grew up hearing is a rounded middle of a range, not a target everyone should hit. The National Sleep Foundation recommends 7 to 9 hours for adults aged 18 to 64, and 7 to 8 for those 65 and older. The CDC puts it as 7 or more hours for adults, echoing the joint consensus of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and the Sleep Research Society, which concluded that healthy adults should sleep at least 7 hours a night for optimal health. Notice what these agree on: a floor of about 7 hours, and a range above it, not one exact number.
The recommended ranges, briefly
Sleep need is highest at birth and settles down through childhood. As a quick orientation: newborns and infants need the most, school-age children land around 9 to 12 hours, teens around 8 to 10, and adults 7 to 9 (a little less past 65). Those are broad brackets, and the full picture, with the age-by-age bedtime chart, lives on its own page.
For the complete table by age, including where each range comes from, see how much sleep you need by age. This guide is about finding your own number as an adult.
Why it is a range, not a single number
Two healthy adults of the same age can genuinely need different amounts of sleep, and the spread comes from a few real sources. Genetics set a baseline: a small number of people carry rare gene variants that let them feel fully rested on six hours or fewer. These true "short sleepers" exist, but they are uncommon, and it is a trait you are born with, not one you can train into. Most people who think they run fine on little sleep are simply used to being tired. Age shifts the number too, as does how active you are, whether you are carrying sleep debt from previous nights, and your overall health. Illness, recovery, and hard physical or mental effort all raise how much sleep your body asks for.
How to find your own number
The most reliable method is also the simplest. Over a stretch with no alarm and no accumulated sleep debt, a relaxed vacation or a quiet week, go to bed when you are tired and let yourself wake naturally. After the first few catch-up nights, the hours you settle into are close to your real need. Most people land somewhere inside the 7 to 9 range, but you might sit near either edge, and that is normal.
Day to day, your best signal is how you feel while awake. If you are reliably alert through the late morning and afternoon without leaning on caffeine or fighting to stay awake, you are getting enough. Persistent daytime sleepiness, needing an alarm to drag yourself up every single day, or sleeping for hours longer on weekends usually means you are short during the week. And consistency matters as much as quantity: a steady 7 and a half hours most nights tends to serve you better than swinging between 5 and 10.
You cannot train yourself to need less
It is a stubborn myth that you can gradually condition your body to thrive on less sleep. You cannot. What actually happens when you cut sleep short over time is that you adapt to the feeling of impairment: your sense of how tired you are dulls, even as your reaction time, focus, and mood keep degrading. Studies of chronic short sleep show that people underestimate their own deficits, rating themselves as functioning fine while measured performance drops. So the absence of a feeling of exhaustion is not proof you have trained your need down. It usually just means you have stopped noticing.
Turning your number into a bedtime
Once you know your target, say 8 hours, the practical question becomes what time to go to bed and what time to wake. That is where the sleep calculator comes in. Sleep runs in roughly 90-minute cycles, and waking at the end of a cycle rather than the middle of one is why two people who both slept eight hours can feel completely different. Enter your wake time (or your bedtime) and the tool works backward and forward through those cycles to suggest times that let you rise from light sleep instead of deep sleep. If you already know your cycles run a little long or short, you can adjust that too.
Knowing your number is the foundation. If you have been running short for a while, it also helps to understand what you are carrying: see how sleep debt works. And if you are curious about the 90-minute figure the calculator is built on, how long a sleep cycle really is explains why it is an average worth holding loosely.
Sources: National Sleep Foundation, How Much Sleep Do We Really Need, CDC, About Sleep, and the AASM and Sleep Research Society consensus on recommended sleep for adults.