About this calculator
The Sleep Calculator suggests bedtimes or wake times using 90-minute sleep cycles and a fall-asleep allowance. It helps plan a more natural wake-up point.
Sleep Calculator method
This calculator uses standard health, nutrition, exercise, or measurement formulas to create an educational estimate. Results are designed for planning and comparison, not diagnosis.
- sleep cycle = about 90 minutes
- suggested time = target time +/- cycle count x 90 minutes
How to use the sleep calculator
- Enter the requested body measurement, activity, food, time, or goal details.
- Check the units carefully before using the result.
- Review the main result and the supporting breakdown.
- Use the worked examples and reference table to sense-check the result.
- Adjust assumptions if your real situation differs from the default values.
Worked examples
Wake at 7:00
Input: 7:00 wake time, 15 minutes to fall asleep
Calculation: Subtract 6, 5, or 4 sleep cycles plus 15 minutes
Result: Suggested bedtimes shown
Sleep at 23:00
Input: 11:00pm bed time
Calculation: Add 4-7 sleep cycles
Result: Suggested wake times shown
When this calculator is useful
Use this tool for quick planning, comparison, or learning the method behind the calculation. It is especially useful when you want a transparent estimate rather than a black-box app result.
Common mistakes
- Mixing units
- Entering inches where centimetres are expected, or miles where kilometres are expected, can make the answer look plausible but wrong.
- Treating estimates as exact
- Health and fitness formulas are averages. Real bodies vary with age, sex, medication, fitness, sleep, illness, and measurement accuracy.
Health and safety note
This calculator is for general information only and is not medical advice. Speak to a GP, health visitor, dietitian, qualified coach, or other relevant professional before making health decisions, especially for children, pregnancy, alcohol, medical conditions, or restrictive diets.
Frequently asked questions
Is this result exact?
No. It is an estimate based on common formulas and typical assumptions. Use it as a guide, not a clinical measurement.
Can I use this for medical decisions?
No. It can help you understand the numbers, but medical decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional.
Why does my wearable or app show a different number?
Different tools use different assumptions, sensors, and formulas. Terrain, fitness, body composition, and measurement technique can all change the result.
Should children use adult health categories?
No. Children need age- and sex-adjusted interpretation. Adult BMI and weight categories do not apply directly to children.
How should I use the result?
Use it to compare scenarios, plan goals, or understand the formula. Recheck with real-world progress and professional guidance where needed.
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