Academic Research
Seasonal Effects on Sleep Performance
We used a large anonymized dataset to track nights of sleep from people across hundreds of countries to understand how seasons affect sleep. We found that each extra hour of sunlight costs you about ~5 minutes of sleep, but the effect is surprisingly small. More importantly, traditional season labels like "winter" and "summer" explain almost nothing once you account for actual daylight hours. The biggest differences in sleep aren't driven by the sun at all, but by culture, country, and the daily routines we build around them.
Key takeaways
Does the Season Really Change How You Sleep?
You've probably heard that we sleep more in winter and less in summer. It makes intuitive sense that our bodies run on a circadian rhythm, an internal clock tuned to the cycle of light and dark. When the days get shorter, shouldn't we sleep longer?
It turns out the answer is more nuanced than you'd think, and it has a lot more to do with where you live and how your culture operates than the raw amount of sunlight you're getting.
Full pre-print research paper here.
What we set out to study
Most previous research on seasonal sleep patterns has been limited to single countries, making it hard to separate the effect of daylight from the effect of local culture, work schedules, and social habits. We wanted to test this on a global scale.
Using a large anonymized dataset using wearable and sensor data from people across hundreds of countries we asked three core questions.
Does sleep duration actually change with daylight hours?
Does this effect get stronger the further you live from the equator (where seasonal swings in daylight are more dramatic)?
Do different countries respond to seasonal light changes differently, even after accounting for geography?
What we found
Daylight does affect sleep, but only slightly. For every extra hour of daylight in a day, people slept about ~5 fewer minutes. Over a year, the difference between the longest and shortest only shifts your sleep by about 15–20 minutes on average, depending on where you live.
Latitude barely matters. You might expect people in Scandinavia or northern Canada, where summer days can last 18+ hours, to show much bigger seasonal sleep swings than people near the equator. We found almost no evidence of this. The photoperiod effect was essentially the same whether you lived at 10° or 60° latitude.
Season labels are misleading. Many previous studies reported that people sleep differently in "winter" versus "summer." When we tested this with our global dataset, those categorical seasonal effects disappeared almost entirely. Once we accounted for actual daylight hours, labels like "spring" and "autumn" added no meaningful explanatory power.
Culture and country matter more than light. This was perhaps our most striking finding. Different countries showed very different baseline sleep durations and different sensitivities to daylight changes, even after adjusting for latitude and individual differences.
Why this matters
The practical takeaway is that your sleep patterns are shaped far more by your daily routines, cultural context, and personal habits than by the season. While daylight does exert a small, consistent pull on how long we sleep, it's dwarfed by the influence of work schedules, social norms, and lifestyle.
Link to pre-print research paper here.
Summary
- Does the season actually change how long I sleep?
- Barely. Across a global wearable dataset spanning hundreds of countries, every extra hour of daylight reduced sleep by only about 5 minutes. Over a full year, that translates to just a 15–20 minute swing between the longest and shortest days — far smaller than most people assume.
- Do people in far-northern countries show bigger seasonal sleep swings?
- No, and this was one of the most surprising findings. Despite summer days lasting 18+ hours in places like Scandinavia and northern Canada, the photoperiod effect on sleep was essentially identical at 10° latitude and 60° latitude. Living closer to the poles does not amplify seasonal sleep changes the way intuition suggests.
- Is it true that people sleep more in winter than summer?
- Not once you look at the actual data. Categorical season labels like 'winter' and 'summer' lost almost all explanatory power once daylight hours were accounted for directly. Earlier studies reporting strong seasonal effects were likely capturing daylight variation — and cultural patterns — rather than anything intrinsic to the seasons themselves.
- Why am I not sleeping dramatically more in winter like I expected?
- Because the daylight effect is small and your routines dominate. The data shows roughly 5 fewer minutes of sleep per extra hour of daylight — a real but minor pull. Work schedules, social norms, and personal habits exert far more influence on your nightly sleep than the time of year.
- Does where I live matter more than the season I'm in?
- Yes. Different countries showed markedly different baseline sleep durations and different sensitivities to daylight changes, even after adjusting for latitude and individual differences. Country-level cultural and lifestyle factors outweighed both season and geography in explaining how long people slept.
- Can wearable data reliably detect seasonal sleep patterns?
- Yes — and at a scale no prior study has achieved. By aggregating anonymized wearable and sensor data across hundreds of countries, the analysis could separate daylight effects from cultural and geographic factors that single-country studies couldn't disentangle. The result is a much cleaner estimate of how light actually influences human sleep globally.
- Should I change my sleep routine based on the season?
- Probably not. With only a 15–20 minute annual swing attributable to daylight, seasonal adjustments offer minimal leverage on your sleep. You'll get far more benefit from optimizing daily routines, work schedules, and consistent sleep timing than from chasing seasonal strategies.
- Does latitude affect my sleep at all?
- Surprisingly little. The photoperiod effect on sleep duration was essentially flat across latitudes, meaning someone in the tropics and someone near the Arctic Circle respond to daylight changes in nearly the same way. Geography sets the stage, but it doesn't drive the variation people often assume it does.