I tried 12 sleep hacks for 30 days. Only 4 helped me fall asleep faster, wake less, and stop feeling wrecked by morning.
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Get it on Play StoreI was tired of being the person who says, “I’ll fix my sleep this week,” and then scrolls in bed until 1:12 a.m.
So I ran a stupidly simple experiment: 12 popular sleep hacks, 30 days, one change at a time. I tracked how long it took me to fall asleep, how often I woke up, and how wrecked I felt in the morning.
And the verdict was pretty brutal - only 4 actually helped. The rest were either useless for me, too annoying to keep up with, or weirdly overrated.
I didn’t want this to be vague wellness fluff, so I kept the list very normal:
I gave each one at least a couple nights, and for the ones that seemed promising, I repeated them enough to see a pattern. Not scientific-lab perfect, but real-life good enough.
And real life is the point, right? If something works only in theory and not when you’re tired, stressed, and staring at your phone, it doesn’t count.
Here’s the part you probably care about.
This was the biggest win by far.
I used to think, “Coffee at 4 p.m. is fine. I’m built different.” I was not built different. I was just under-slept and lying to myself.
When I cut caffeine after 2 p.m., I fell asleep about 20 to 30 minutes faster on average. More importantly, I stopped getting that annoying half-awake, half-dead feeling at 11 p.m. where my brain wanted to sprint and my body wanted to melt.
Actionable version:
If you only try one thing from this whole list, try this one first.
This one was annoyingly effective.
I always thought “cool room” was vague wellness advice. Turns out it’s not vague at all. For me, the sweet spot was around 65 to 68°F. Anything warmer and I tossed around more.
My sleep got deeper, and I woke up less sweaty and irritated. That last part matters more than people admit. Bad sleep isn’t just about being tired - it makes you weirdly angry at the existence of sheets.
Actionable version:
If your room feels like a sauna, stop blaming your mattress.
I didn’t expect this one to matter, but it did.
The biggest benefit wasn’t that it made me sleepy. It was that it kept random sounds from punching holes in my sleep - neighbors, pipes, cars, the weird little creaks your house makes at 3 a.m. when it wants drama.
I still woke up sometimes, but I fell back asleep faster. That’s a huge difference.
Actionable version:
And yes, this worked better than trying to “just ignore the noise,” which is not a strategy.
This was the most boring-sounding hack and one of the best.
Twenty minutes of reading a physical book did more for me than blue light glasses, sleepy tea, and a bunch of other things that cost more and promised way more. It gave my brain a clear off-ramp.
Not every book worked. Fast plots kept me awake. So I stuck to stuff that was interesting but not gripping enough to hijack my bedtime.
Actionable version:
This is the closest thing I found to telling my brain, “We’re done here.”
This is where the internet gets a little annoying, because a lot of these hacks are sold like magic.
No real difference for me.
Maybe they help some people, but I didn’t notice better sleep, faster sleep, or fewer wakeups. They also made me feel like I was pretending to be a productivity guy on a podcast.
Helpful in theory, miserable in practice.
When I actually did it, I was less stimulated. But the tradeoff was bad: I got bored, then restless, then annoyed. For me, a full no-screen rule was too rigid to sustain.
No clear effect.
I know a lot of people swear by it. I just didn’t feel a meaningful change after enough nights to believe it was doing much for me.
Mixed at best.
It felt cozy, but it also got too warm. And once I was warm, the whole thing stopped being relaxing and started feeling like I was trapped inside a heavy burrito.
Hard no.
It felt uncomfortable and distracted me more than it helped. I’m not interested in going to bed feeling like I’m participating in a hostage situation.
Nice ritual, weak result.
It smelled calming. That’s about the nicest thing I can say. The actual sleep benefit was tiny.
Some benefit, but not enough to rank high.
It was relaxing, sure. But by itself, it didn’t move the needle much. I think it works better as part of a routine, not as a standalone hack.
This one is weirdly overrated.
Working out earlier in the day is probably good overall, but I didn’t see a dramatic sleep improvement from it alone. Honestly, I think people credit exercise for sleep when the real hero is just being generally more tired.
I thought sleep was going to be about finding the perfect trick.
But it wasn’t. Sleep improved when I removed friction, not when I chased hacks. Caffeine cutoff, cool room, white noise, reading - those are boring, repeatable, and actually usable on a random Tuesday night.
And the flashy stuff? Mostly noise.
I also learned that sleep isn’t one problem. It’s a chain. If you have caffeine too late, your room is warm, and your brain is still buzzing from screens, no single supplement is going to save you.
If I had to rebuild my bedtime from scratch, I’d keep it stupid simple:
That’s it. Four things. No taping, no gimmicks, no expensive miracle products.
And if I’m having a rough week, I don’t try to be perfect. I just protect the basics. That’s what made the biggest difference.
Don’t test 12 hacks at once. That’s how you end up confused and tired.
Try this instead:
And if you want a simple way to stay consistent, Trider on myhabits.in makes that part way less annoying.
So if sleep has been weird for you lately, steal my short list, ignore the gimmicks, and test the basics for a week. And if you want to make it stick, try Trider and track the habits that actually matter.