How Much Sleep Do You Actually Need? (Hint: It Changes With Age)
When's the last time you woke up feeling genuinely rested? If you're struggling to remember, you're not alone. But here's the thing: how much sleep you need isn't a one-size-fits-all answer, and it actually shifts throughout your life.
Babies are basically sleep champions, clocking in at 14–17 hours a day (must be nice, honestly). Toddlers need 11–14 hours, and school-age kids thrive on 9–12 hours. Teenagers — despite what we might've thought about them being "lazy" — genuinely need 8–10 hours because their brains are in full development mode. And us adults? We need 7–9 hours, with older adults (65+) landing right in that same sweet spot.
Now, knowing the numbers is one thing. Actually hitting them is another. A few tips that actually help:
Protect your wind-down time. Treat the hour before bed like sacred space. Dim the lights, put the phone face down, and let your nervous system know the day is coming to an end.
Keep your schedule consistent — yes, even on weekends. Your circadian rhythm runs like clockwork, so erratic sleep times can throw your whole system off.
Watch the late-night caffeine. That 4 PM latte? It might still be in your system at midnight. Try a Sleepy Girl Mocktail instead?
And if you're consistently tired despite hitting your hours, it might be worth chatting with your doctor. Sometimes fatigue runs deeper than sleep alone. Your body's always trying to tell you something — it just helps to actually listen.
Ask Clara:
"How do I improve my sleep?"