Temperature is one of the most powerful — and most overlooked — factors affecting sleep quality. Your body’s internal temperature follows a circadian pattern that’s tightly linked to your sleep-wake cycle: it rises during the day to promote alertness and drops 1-2°F (0.5-1°C) in the evening to promote sleepiness. This temperature decline isn’t just correlated with sleep — it’s a physiological trigger that initiates the sleep process. When your bedroom environment supports this natural cooling, you fall asleep faster, spend more time in deep sleep, and wake up less frequently. When it fights against it, sleep suffers.
This guide explains the science of how temperature regulates sleep and gives you practical strategies to optimize your sleeping temperature.
The Science: How Your Body Temperature Controls Sleep
The Circadian Temperature Cycle
Your core body temperature follows a predictable 24-hour cycle controlled by your circadian rhythm. It’s lowest in the early morning hours (around 4-5 AM) and highest in the late afternoon (around 5-7 PM). The evening decline — from peak temperature to the lower nighttime range — is one of the signals your brain uses to initiate sleep.
This temperature drop is mediated by vasodilation — your blood vessels near the skin surface dilate, allowing more blood to flow to the extremities (hands and feet), which radiates heat away from the core. This is why your hands and feet often feel warm before you fall asleep — they’re acting as radiators, dissipating heat from your core to lower your internal temperature.
Temperature and Sleep Stages
Temperature affects different sleep stages differently:
- Sleep onset: The rate of core temperature decline is a strong predictor of how quickly you fall asleep. Faster cooling = faster sleep onset. This is why a warm bath before bed works — the subsequent rapid cooling after you get out promotes sleepiness.
- Deep sleep (slow-wave sleep): Deep sleep occurs most readily when core temperature is at its lowest. A warm bedroom reduces the amount of deep sleep you get because your body can’t cool down sufficiently. Deep sleep is critical for physical recovery, immune function, and memory consolidation.
- REM sleep: During REM sleep, your body’s thermoregulation is partially suspended — you don’t shiver or sweat as effectively. This makes you more vulnerable to environmental temperature extremes during REM periods. A bedroom that’s too hot or too cold can cause awakenings during REM sleep.
What Happens When You’re Too Warm
Sleeping in a warm environment (above 70°F / 21°C for most people) has measurable negative effects:
- Delayed sleep onset — your body can’t cool down fast enough to trigger sleep
- Reduced deep sleep — the most physically restorative sleep stage is suppressed
- Increased nighttime awakenings — your body wakes you up to cool down (kicking off blankets, sweating)
- Reduced REM sleep — the dream stage important for emotional processing and memory
- Increased sweating and discomfort — leading to restless, fragmented sleep
The Optimal Bedroom Temperature
Research consistently points to 65-68°F (18-20°C) as the optimal bedroom temperature for most adults. This range supports the natural core temperature decline that promotes sleep onset and deep sleep. However, individual preferences vary:
- Most adults: 65-68°F (18-20°C)
- Hot sleepers: 62-66°F (17-19°C)
- Cold sleepers: 67-70°F (19-21°C)
- Infants: 68-72°F (20-22°C) — slightly warmer because infants can’t regulate temperature as effectively
- Elderly adults: 66-70°F (19-21°C) — slightly warmer because thermoregulation becomes less efficient with age
These are starting points — your ideal temperature depends on your bedding, sleepwear, body composition, and personal preference. The best indicator is how you feel: if you’re waking up sweating or kicking off blankets, your bedroom is too warm. If you’re curling up and shivering, it’s too cold.
Strategies for Sleeping Cooler
Bedroom Environment
- Air conditioning or fan: The most direct way to cool your bedroom. A ceiling fan or standing fan provides air circulation that enhances evaporative cooling from your skin. Set your thermostat to 65-68°F before bed.
- Cross-ventilation: If you don’t have AC, open windows on opposite sides of the room to create airflow. Even a slight breeze significantly improves perceived temperature.
- Block daytime heat: Close blinds and curtains during the day to prevent solar heating. A bedroom that absorbs heat all day will be warm at night regardless of nighttime temperature.
- Dehumidify: Humidity makes warm temperatures feel hotter because it reduces the effectiveness of sweat evaporation. A dehumidifier or AC (which also dehumidifies) can make a warm room feel significantly cooler.
Bedding
- Breathable sheets: Cotton (especially percale weave), bamboo, linen, and Tencel sheets are more breathable than polyester or microfiber. Percale cotton is the coolest common sheet material.
- Lightweight comforter: Use a lightweight, breathable comforter or duvet rather than a heavy one. Down-alternative with a low fill weight or a cotton blanket provides warmth without excessive insulation.
- Cooling mattress pad: A cooling mattress pad or topper with gel, phase-change material, or breathable construction can reduce the heat buildup between your body and the mattress.
- Avoid memory foam trapping: Memory foam mattresses and toppers trap more heat than hybrid, latex, or innerspring options. If you sleep hot on memory foam, consider a cooling topper or switching to a more breathable mattress type.
Personal Cooling
- Warm bath or shower before bed: Counterintuitively, a warm bath 1-2 hours before bed helps you sleep cooler. The warm water dilates blood vessels near the skin surface, and when you get out, the rapid heat loss from these dilated vessels drops your core temperature faster than it would naturally — accelerating the cooling process that triggers sleep.
- Light sleepwear: Wear lightweight, breathable sleepwear (cotton, bamboo) or sleep without clothes. Tight, synthetic sleepwear traps heat against your body.
- Cool your extremities: Since your hands and feet are your body’s primary heat radiators, keeping them uncovered allows heat to dissipate more effectively. Sticking one foot out from under the blanket is a natural cooling mechanism.
Mattress Choice
- Coolest: Innerspring and latex mattresses — the coil system or open-cell latex structure allows airflow through the mattress
- Moderate: Hybrid mattresses — the coil base provides airflow while the foam comfort layer retains some heat
- Warmest: All-foam memory foam mattresses — the dense, closed-cell structure traps heat with no internal airflow mechanism
Why Some People Sleep Hotter Than Others
Several factors affect how warm you sleep:
- Body composition: Higher body fat provides more insulation, retaining heat. Larger body mass generates more metabolic heat.
- Metabolism: Higher metabolic rates generate more body heat. This is why some people are naturally “warm sleepers.”
- Hormones: Hormonal fluctuations (menopause, menstrual cycle, thyroid conditions) can significantly affect body temperature regulation. Hot flashes during menopause are a common cause of sleep disruption.
- Medications: Some medications affect thermoregulation, including certain antidepressants, blood pressure medications, and hormonal treatments.
- Age: Thermoregulation becomes less efficient with age, making older adults more sensitive to environmental temperature.
- Sharing a bed: Two bodies in one bed generate twice the heat. Couples often sleep warmer than single sleepers, especially on mattresses that trap heat.
The Warm Bath Paradox
It seems counterintuitive that warming up before bed helps you sleep cooler, but the science is clear. A 2019 systematic review published in Sleep Medicine Reviews analyzed 5,322 studies and found that a warm bath or shower (104-109°F / 40-43°C) taken 1-2 hours before bedtime significantly improved sleep quality and reduced the time to fall asleep.
The mechanism: warm water causes vasodilation (blood vessel expansion) near the skin surface. When you exit the warm water, these dilated blood vessels rapidly radiate heat from your core to the environment, dropping your core temperature faster and more dramatically than it would decline naturally. This accelerated cooling mimics and amplifies the natural pre-sleep temperature decline, sending a strong sleep signal to your brain.
The timing matters — 1-2 hours before bed gives your body time to complete the cooling process. A bath immediately before bed may leave you feeling warm rather than cool.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it better to sleep cold or warm?
Cool is better for sleep quality. Research consistently shows that cooler bedroom temperatures (65-68°F) promote faster sleep onset, more deep sleep, and fewer nighttime awakenings. Sleeping too warm suppresses deep sleep and causes fragmented sleep. However, sleeping too cold (below 60°F for most people) can also disrupt sleep by causing shivering and discomfort. The goal is cool but comfortable.
Why do I wake up hot in the middle of the night?
Several possible causes: your bedroom temperature rises during the night (especially if AC cycles off), your bedding traps too much heat, your mattress retains heat, hormonal fluctuations (common during menopause), or you’re in a REM sleep period when thermoregulation is reduced. Try lowering your thermostat, switching to more breathable bedding, or using a cooling mattress pad.
Should I sleep with socks on?
It depends. Wearing socks to bed can actually help you fall asleep faster by warming your feet, which promotes vasodilation and accelerates core temperature decline. However, if your feet get too warm during the night, socks can contribute to overheating. Try it both ways and see which helps you fall asleep faster and stay comfortable through the night.
Does sleeping naked help you sleep cooler?
Yes. Sleeping without clothes eliminates the insulating layer of fabric against your skin, allowing heat to dissipate more freely. It also allows your skin to interact directly with your bedding, which can be cooler than sleepwear. If you’re comfortable sleeping naked, it’s one of the simplest ways to reduce nighttime overheating.
The Bottom Line
Temperature is a fundamental sleep regulator that most people overlook. Your body needs to cool down to fall asleep and stay asleep, and your bedroom environment either supports or hinders this process. Keep your bedroom at 65-68°F, use breathable bedding, choose a mattress that doesn’t trap heat, and consider a warm bath 1-2 hours before bed to accelerate your natural cooling process. These simple adjustments can meaningfully improve your sleep quality — especially deep sleep, which is the most physically restorative stage. Your body will thank you for creating a cool sleeping environment.