Sleep Cycles Explained: Why 8 Hours Isn't Always Right

Published Apr 14, 2026 Β· 5 min read

You've slept 9 hours and still feel terrible. Your friend sleeps 6.5 hours and bounces out of bed. The difference isn't how long you sleep β€” it's when you wake up relative to your sleep cycles.

The 90-Minute Sleep Cycle

Each sleep cycle lasts approximately 90 minutes and contains four stages:

StageTypeDurationFunction
N1Light sleep5-10 minTransition, easy to wake
N2Light sleep20 minHeart rate slows, temp drops
N3Deep sleep20-40 minPhysical repair, growth hormone
REMDream sleep10-60 minMemory, learning, emotional processing

You cycle through these 4-6 times per night. Early cycles have more deep sleep; later cycles have more REM.

Why You Wake Up Groggy

If your alarm goes off during N3 deep sleep, you experience "sleep inertia" β€” that heavy, disoriented feeling. Waking during N1 or N2 (light sleep) feels effortless. The key: set your alarm to a multiple of 90 minutes after you fall asleep.

Optimal Sleep Durations

Add 15 minutes to account for the time it takes to fall asleep.

Tips for Better Sleep

Try it: Use our Sleep Calculator to find the best bedtime or wake time based on 90-minute cycles.
πŸ“š Sources: NIH USDA AHA