Bedroom & Gear
Setting Your Bedroom to the Ideal Sleep Temperature
A cool room helps your core temperature drop into deep sleep. Learn the ideal bedroom temperature range and practical ways to reach it in any season.
Bedroom & Gear
A cool room helps your core temperature drop into deep sleep. Learn the ideal bedroom temperature range and practical ways to reach it in any season.
If you have ever kicked the duvet off at 3 a.m. and then dragged it back an hour later, you already know that temperature is doing something to your sleep. It is one of the most powerful and most overlooked levers you have over how well you rest, and unlike a lot of sleep advice, it is genuinely within your control. Getting your bedroom to the right temperature is less about buying anything and more about understanding what your body is trying to do overnight, then getting out of its way.
Your body does not stay at a flat temperature around the clock. It runs on a daily rhythm, warming through the day and cooling in the evening, and that evening cooldown is one of the signals that tells your brain it is time to wind down. As you fall asleep, your core temperature drops by a small but meaningful amount, and it stays lowered through much of the night before climbing again toward morning.
Here is the part that matters for your bedroom: your body sheds that heat by pushing blood toward the surface of your skin, especially your hands and feet, and releasing warmth into the air around you. If the air around you is already warm, that heat has nowhere to go. The cooldown stalls, and the deep, restorative stages of sleep get harder to reach and harder to hold onto. A cool room is not a luxury or a preference so much as a piece of infrastructure your sleep quietly depends on.
This is also why a hot bedroom tends to fragment your night rather than just delay the start of it. You might fall asleep fine, but as the night goes on and your body cannot offload heat, you surface more often, toss more, and wake up feeling like you barely slept even if the clock says otherwise.
The commonly cited sweet spot lands in the mid-60s Fahrenheit, roughly 18 to 20 degrees Celsius. If you want a single number to aim for as a starting point, 65°F (about 18.5°C) is a sensible default that suits a lot of people.
A few honest caveats, because the number is a starting line, not a rule:
The way to find your own number is boring but reliable: pick a setting, hold it for a few nights, and pay attention to how you feel waking up rather than how the room feels the moment you climb in. A room that feels slightly too cool when you first get into bed is often exactly right once you are under the covers and your body settles.
You do not need a sophisticated climate system to hit these numbers. Most of the useful moves are simple.
Moving air helps your skin release heat even when you cannot change the actual temperature much, which makes a fan one of the highest-value things in a warm bedroom.
You can obsess over the thermostat and still sleep hot if your bedding traps heat. Think of your covers as the layer that decides how much of the room you actually feel.
One trade-off worth naming: the cool, crisp bedding that feels wonderful in July can feel austere in January. There is nothing wrong with keeping a warmer set in rotation and swapping seasonally. Your body's needs change through the year, and your bed can too.
This one sounds backwards, so it is worth explaining. A warm bath or shower an hour or two before bed actually helps you cool down. The warm water pulls blood toward the surface of your skin, and when you step out, that blood-warmed skin dumps heat quickly, nudging your core temperature down faster than it would have on its own. The result is a steeper, cleaner cooldown right when you want it.
A few practical notes:
The target stays roughly the same year-round, but how you reach it flips completely depending on the weather.
There is a growing market of cooling mattress pads, water-cooled toppers, and app-controlled bedroom climate gadgets, and some of them genuinely help, especially for people who run hot or share a bed with someone who does. But I would treat them as the last step, not the first. The cheap moves, cracking a window, swapping to breathable sheets, running a fan, closing the blinds, and timing a warm shower, get most people most of the way there for almost nothing. Spend on gear only once you know your baseline and understand exactly which problem you are still trying to solve.
If you use a smart thermostat, a small overnight setback schedule is worth setting up: let the room drift down after you go to bed and warm slightly before your alarm, which mirrors your body's own rhythm and can make waking up feel less abrupt.
A good night's sleep is easier to build than to buy, and temperature is one of the clearest examples. Aim for a cool room in the mid-60s Fahrenheit, help your body's natural cooldown along with breathable bedding and a well-timed warm shower, and adjust your tools rather than your target as the seasons turn. Give any change a few nights before you judge it, and let how you feel in the morning be the real verdict. Get the temperature right and a surprising number of other sleep problems quietly get smaller on their own.
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