Light Signals
Dimming lights and reducing blue light from screens trigger melatonin production. This is one of the most powerful timing signals your body recognises.
Your evening routine signals to your body that sleep approaches. Learn practical, adjustable strategies for the 30–60 minutes before bed that matter most.
Your body doesn't know it's bedtime by looking at a clock—it learns through signals you give it.
Dimming lights and reducing blue light from screens trigger melatonin production. This is one of the most powerful timing signals your body recognises.
Shifting from stimulating activities (work, screens, intense conversation) to calming ones signals your nervous system that it's time to downregulate.
Gentle movement, breathing, or stretching lower your heart rate and body temperature—physical cues that sleep approaches.
An effective evening routine follows three overlapping phases. Adapt the duration to your schedule.
Time window: Usually 18:00–19:30 for a 21:30 bedtime.
Close work tasks. Step away from your desk. This isn't part of the wind-down routine itself, but it's the bridge out of your active day. A short walk or change of location helps mark this transition.
Action items: Finish active work. Check notifications one final time if needed. Then step back.
Time window: Usually 20:30–21:00 for a 21:30 bedtime.
Begin dimming lights. Move to a room with lower light. Reduce screen time significantly. Your environment becomes noticeably quieter. This is when melatonin production kicks in.
Action items: Dim main lights. Set phone to low brightness or put it away. Move to your bedroom or a quiet space.
Time window: Usually 21:15–21:45 for a 21:45 bedtime.
This is your intentional wind-down: light reading, gentle stretching, breathing exercises, or a warm drink. Your body temperature is lowering, heart rate is steady, and mental activity is minimal.
Action items: Choose one or two calming activities. Aim for zero screens. Get into bed at your target time.
Pick one or two from this list that appeal to you. Consistency matters more than perfection—the same activity signals routine.
These are the barriers people most often encounter. Knowing them helps you navigate them.
Strategy: Put your phone in another room during Stage 2. Set a specific time after dinner when you do a final check, then leave it there. Replace the habit with something physical: reading, stretching, tea. The first week is hardest; by week two, the absence feels normal.
Strategy: This often means your internal clock is later than your target bedtime. Shift your wake time earlier first (even 15 minutes) and get bright light immediately after waking. This pulls your rhythm earlier. Evening routines take 2–3 weeks to show full effect; give it time.
Strategy: Communicate your routine to your household. Ask for support 30 minutes before bed: quieter conversation, dimmer lighting, fewer interruptions. Most families respond well to clarity about timing and importance.
Strategy: The timing shifts with your schedule, but the structure stays the same. If you finish work at 21:00 and sleep at 22:30, start environmental shift (dim lights, leave work) immediately at 21:00, then do 15–30 minutes of Stage 3. Consistency in the routine matters more than clock time.
Use this simple checklist to notice what works for your routine.
Track for 7 days. Note which activities you used and how you felt. No judgment—just observation.
| Day | Dimmed Lights | No Screens (30 min before bed) | Activity Used | Bedtime Met | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | ☐ | ☐ | — | ☐ | e.g., felt rushed; tea helped |
| Tuesday | ☐ | ☐ | — | ☐ | |
| Wednesday | ☐ | ☐ | — | ☐ | |
| Thursday | ☐ | ☐ | — | ☐ | |
| Friday | ☐ | ☐ | — | ☐ | |
| Saturday | ☐ | ☐ | — | ☐ | |
| Sunday | ☐ | ☐ | — | ☐ |
After the week: Look for patterns. Which activities helped? Which nights met your bedtime? Use that information to refine next week.
We'll help you build an evening wind-down that fits your life and supports stable sleep.
Schedule a Session