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"Get your eight hours" was never the whole story. The right number depends on your age, your body, and your stage of life — and getting it right may be the single biggest health upgrade you make this year.
Australians like to think we're a well-rested nation. The reality is more complicated.
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, adults who wore activity trackers in 2023 slept an average of 7 hours and 36 minutes a night — but the averages hide a meaningful split between people who consistently hit healthy sleep targets and those who fall short. Source 2: Australian Bureau of Statistics (2024)
Average sleep per night for Australian adults (ABS, 2023)
Source 2: Australian Bureau of Statistics (2024)of Australian adults get less than the recommended 7 hours a night
Source 3: Sleep Health (2017)of Australian adults sleep fewer than 6 hours a night
Source 2: Australian Bureau of Statistics (2024)The National Sleep Foundation's evidence-based recommendations are the most widely cited targets in sleep medicine. Your ideal duration falls within a range — and where you sit in that range depends on genetics, activity levels, and individual recovery needs. Source 1: Sleep Health (2015)
| Age group | Recommended sleep | What to know |
|---|---|---|
| Newborns (0-3 months) | 14-17 hours | Sleep is broken into short bursts around feeding |
| Infants (4-11 months) | 12-15 hours | Includes daytime naps; longer nights start emerging |
| Toddlers (1-2 years) | 11-14 hours | One or two naps still developmentally important |
| Preschoolers (3-5 years) | 10-13 hours | Most stop napping by age five |
| School-age (6-13 years) | 9-11 hours | Critical for memory, mood and growth |
| Teenagers (14-17 years) | 8-10 hours | Body clock shifts later — early school starts are tough |
| Adults (18-64 years) | 7-9 hours | The sweet spot for most working-age Australians |
| Older adults (65+) | 7-8 hours | Sleep often becomes more fragmented but the need remains |
The consequences of chronic sleep loss aren't just feeling groggy. They're measurable in clinical studies, blood tests, and long-term health outcomes. Here's what the research actually shows.
In a landmark UCSF study, people sleeping 5-6 hours a night were 4.2 times more likely to catch a cold after exposure to the rhinovirus than those sleeping more than 7 hours.
Source 4: Sleep (2015)A 2024 meta-analysis of 39 studies and 1,234 participants found that sleeping 3-6.5 hours significantly disrupts memory formation — and weekend "catch-up sleep" doesn't fully undo the damage.
Source 5: Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews (2024)Sleep deprivation disrupts your autonomic nervous system, elevating sympathetic activity. People who routinely sleep under 6 hours show significantly higher rates of hypertension and cardiovascular disease.
Source 6: Frontiers in Neurology (2025)A 2025 meta-analysis confirmed Cappuccio's landmark earlier work: people sleeping too little or too much show a 14-34% increase in all-cause mortality risk compared with those hitting the recommended range.
Source 7: GeroScience (2025)Here's a question almost nobody thinks to ask: is the way you sleep right now — one solid block of 7 to 9 hours, in a dark bedroom, between roughly 11pm and 7am — actually the way humans have always slept?
The honest answer from historians and sleep scientists is no. The "one consolidated sleep" model is, in evolutionary terms, very new. And looking at how humans used to do it (and how some still do) helps explain why the 3am wake-up that feels so frustrating might not be a sign that anything is wrong with you.
The big idea: Modern monophasic sleep is partly a product of artificial lighting, industrial work schedules, and electrified evenings. Before all that, the dominant pattern in Western societies wasn't one long block — it was two.
Here's how human sleep has been organised across history and across cultures. Each visualisation represents a single 24-hour day, with the darker bars showing when sleep takes place.
Documented by historian Roger Ekirch in over 2,000 references — from Homer's Odyssey to 17th-century diaries — describing two distinct sleeps separated by an hour or two of quiet wakefulness around midnight.
The pattern most readers will recognise — and the historical exception, not the rule. Ekirch argues it only became dominant after street lighting and the industrial workday created economic incentives to compress sleep.
Common in Spain, Greece, Italy and much of Latin America. The only biphasic pattern with both cultural precedent and modern scientific support — short afternoon naps improve alertness without disrupting night sleep.
The most extreme of the modern polyphasic schedules. Despite enthusiastic forum communities, the science is firmly against it — the Sleep Foundation reports no peer-reviewed evidence these schedules are sustainable or safe.
The most striking thing about Ekirch's historical research is that it's been independently confirmed by modern sleep biology. In a now-famous 1992 study at the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health, sleep researcher Thomas Wehr put healthy adults in a controlled environment with only 10 hours of daylight per day for a month — roughly the light conditions of a preindustrial winter.
The first few nights, participants slept around 11 hours (catching up on chronic sleep debt). By week four, something remarkable happened: their sleep naturally split into two roughly equal bouts of four hours, separated by one to three hours of calm wakefulness — almost exactly the pattern Ekirch described from preindustrial diaries. Under the right lighting conditions, the segmented sleep pattern emerged on its own. Source 9: Journal of Sleep Research (1992)
The honest takeaway: if you find yourself wide awake at 3am for an hour, you're not broken — you may simply be expressing a sleep pattern your great-great-grandparents would have recognised as normal. The fix isn't to panic, it's to stay calm, keep the lights low, and let yourself drift back. But the modern productivity culture of "hacking" sleep down to two or four hours through micro-naps is doing exactly the opposite of what the evidence supports. Total sleep matters. Hit the 7-9 hour range, in whatever arrangement actually fits your life, and you're on solid scientific ground.
The goal isn't a perfect routine — it's a slightly better one. Three evidence-backed changes you can start tonight.
Even on weekends. Australian research on older adults found that bed and wake times varying by more than 60 minutes were strongly linked with sleeping less than 7 hours a night. Consistency is the single most underrated sleep variable.
Source 11: Clinical Gerontology (2017)Dark, cool, and quiet are the three non-negotiables. Light leaking through curtains, partner noise, traffic, and bedroom temperature are the most common reasons Australians wake at 4am and can't get back to sleep — and all three are fixable.
The Sleep Health Foundation's 2016 national survey found that 26% of Australians who used the internet most or every night just before bed reported frequent sleep difficulties or daytime impairment. A 30-minute pre-bed wind-down is the highest-leverage change you can make.
Source 3: Sleep Health (2017)None of these will sleep for you — but each one removes a barrier between you and the rest you've earned. These are the categories Australian customers reach for most often when they're trying to close the gap on their sleep target.
Block light
Early Australian sunrises and partner reading lamps don't stand a chance against a properly contoured mask. Darkness triggers melatonin production — your body's natural sleep signal.
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Mask noise
Traffic, snoring, noisy neighbours, sirens. White, pink and brown noise machines mask sudden interruptions and create a consistent sound environment that helps you stay asleep.
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Audio for side sleepers
Bluetooth headband-style sleep headphones from SleepPhones and others let you fall asleep to music, podcasts or guided meditation without bulky earbuds digging in when you roll over.
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Neck and head support
The wrong pillow height is one of the most overlooked causes of restless sleep. A contoured memory foam pillow that matches your sleep position keeps your neck neutral all night.
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Pressure relief
If your mattress feels too firm, too soft, or just tired, a quality topper can transform your sleep surface overnight — and at a fraction of the cost of replacing your mattress.
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Temperature control
Cool, dark, and quiet — temperature is the most overlooked of the three. Seasonal quilts, breathable bamboo sheets and natural fibres help you regulate body temperature through the night.
Shop NowHitting your sleep number isn't about chasing perfection. It's about giving your body the time it needs to repair, your brain the time it needs to consolidate, and your immune system the time it needs to defend you. The people who sleep well don't just live longer — they live brighter.
Everything else gets easier from there.
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