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Reading Before Bed: Does It Really Help You Sleep?

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Reading Before Bed: Does It Really Help You Sleep?

Reading before bed is a simple, relaxing habit that helps reduce stress, quiet a busy mind, and prepare your body for restful sleep. Learn why it works and how to make it part of your nightly routine.
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Curling up with a book at the end of the day is one of the oldest, cosiest wind-down rituals there is and it turns out it’s genuinely good for your sleep. In a world of late-night scrolling, swapping your phone for a few pages is a small change that can meaningfully improve how you drift off.

Here’s why reading before bed works, how to do it right, and what to read (and avoid).

Quick Takeaways

  • Reading lowers stress and helps calm racing thoughts before bedtime.
  • Choose print books or warm e-readers instead of bright phone screens.
  • Read calming stories for 15–30 minutes to support better sleep.

Why Reading Before Bed Helps You Sleep

Reading helps in a few quiet but powerful ways. First, it’s deeply relaxing research has found that just six minutes of reading can reduce stress significantly, easing the tension and racing thoughts that keep you awake. Second, it distracts your mind from the day’s worries and tomorrow’s to-do list, giving your brain a calm, single focus instead of anxious spirals. And third, done consistently, it becomes a wind-down cue a signal to your body that the day is ending and sleep is next.

Crucially, reading a book replaces something far worse for sleep: the bright, stimulating scroll of a phone. That swap alone is a win.

Print vs. E-Reader

For sleep, a print book is the best choice no light, no notifications, no temptation to check email. If you prefer an e-reader, choose a dedicated device with a warm, front-lit screen (like an e-ink reader) rather than a phone or tablet, which emit brighter, more stimulating light and a world of distractions. Whatever the device, turn the brightness down and switch on any warm-tone night setting. The goal is words without the wakeful glow.

What to Read (and What to Avoid)

"A few peaceful pages before bed can quiet the mind more effectively than endless scrolling."
— Sophia Bennett

The type of book matters. Reach for something calming and enjoyable gentle fiction, a familiar favorite, poetry, or anything that absorbs you without spiking your adrenaline. Avoid page-turning thrillers, distressing news, or work-related material that revs your mind up rather than settling it. If a book is so gripping you can’t put it down, save it for daytime and keep something soothing on the nightstand for bedtime.

How to Build the Habit

Make it easy and inviting. Read in soft, dim lamplight rather than harsh overhead light, get comfortable, and give yourself 15 to 30 minutes as part of your wind-down. A gentle tip: if you tend toward insomnia, it’s often better to read in a cosy chair rather than in bed, so your brain keeps associating the bed strictly with sleep then move to bed once you feel drowsy. Keep it screen-free, and let reading become the last, calming thing you do before lights out.

The Bottom Line

Reading before bed genuinely helps you sleep: it lowers stress, quiets a busy mind, and becomes a soothing signal that it’s time to rest all while replacing the sleep-wrecking phone scroll. Choose a print book or a warm, dim e-reader, pick something calming rather than thrilling, and read in soft light as part of your wind-down. It’s one of the simplest, loveliest habits for better sleep.

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Sleep Tip

Read a calming book in dim light for 15–30 minutes before bed, and keep your phone out of reach for better sleep quality.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does reading before bed help you sleep?
Yes. Reading reduces stress (even a few minutes helps), distracts you from worries, and acts as a calming wind-down cue. It also replaces stimulating phone use, all of which make it easier to fall asleep.
A print book is best because it emits no light and has no distractions. If you use an e-reader, choose a dedicated warm, front-lit e-ink device over a phone or tablet, and keep the brightness low.
What should I read before bed?
About 15 to 30 minutes is plenty as part of your wind-down. The aim is to feel relaxed and drowsy, not to finish a chapter — stop and turn off the light once your eyes get heavy.
Either works, but if you struggle with insomnia, reading in a cosy chair and moving to bed only when drowsy helps your brain associate the bed purely with sleep. Otherwise, reading in bed is a perfectly good wind-down.

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