A helpful bedtime routine checklist for insomnia focuses on consistency, calming cues, and removing common sleep disruptors. The goal is to make it easier for your body to recognize “it’s time to sleep,” night after night, without relying on willpower in the moment.
Pick a nightly “routine start” time (often 60–90 minutes before bed) and keep it steady, even on weekends when possible. Consistency is one of the strongest signals for your circadian rhythm.
Dim lights, lower noise, and keep the bedroom cool. If you can, reserve the bed for sleep and intimacy only, and avoid working or scrolling in bed to reduce the mental association with wakefulness.
Spend 5–10 minutes writing down tomorrow’s to-dos, worries, and anything you don’t want to keep rehearsing. Add a short “next step” for each item (even if it’s just “decide at 10 a.m.”) to help your brain let go.
Examples include a warm shower, gentle stretching, reading a paper book, calm music, or a short breathing routine. Keep it simple and repeat the same sequence nightly so it becomes a cue for sleep.
Include a checklist item to stop caffeine after early afternoon (timing varies by person), avoid nicotine near bedtime, and limit alcohol in the evening since it can fragment sleep later in the night.
Aim to put phones, tablets, and laptops away 30–60 minutes before bed. If you must use a device, use low brightness and night mode, and avoid emotionally activating content.
Add a simple “if I’m awake” plan: keep lights low, avoid checking the time, and do a quiet activity until sleepy. If you’re wide awake for a while, get out of bed briefly to protect the bed-sleep association.
For a longer, step-by-step version you can adapt to your schedule, visit the main guide on Luxifyo.
Most people do well with 30–90 minutes. Start with a realistic 20–30 minute routine you can repeat nightly, then extend it if you need more time to unwind.
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