How to Sleep Better During Ramadan | Guide
Dr. Sarah MitchellSleep during Ramadan is a challenge that affects millions of Muslims across the UAE and the wider Gulf — but the science of circadian rhythm management offers practical strategies to protect sleep quality even when sleep quantity is reduced. This guide covers why Ramadan disrupts sleep, what the research says about managing altered schedules, and how to ensure the sleep you do get is as restorative as possible.
Why Sleep Is Disrupted During Ramadan
Ramadan fundamentally alters the two most powerful regulators of human sleep: meal timing and light exposure patterns. Understanding these mechanisms is the first step toward managing them.
Shifted Meal Timing
During Ramadan, the primary meals shift to Iftar (after sunset) and Suhoor (before dawn). In the UAE, this means eating a substantial meal at approximately 7pm (Iftar) and another at approximately 4:30-5:00am (Suhoor) during the month. Research published in the Journal of Sleep Research confirms that late evening meals delay sleep onset by activating the digestive system and raising core body temperature — both of which signal wakefulness to the brain.
The Suhoor wake-up creates an additional challenge. Waking at 4:30am to eat, then attempting to return to sleep, fragments the final sleep cycle. This is the cycle when the highest proportion of REM sleep occurs — the stage critical for memory consolidation, emotional regulation, and cognitive restoration.
Dehydration
Fasting during daylight hours in the Gulf, where temperatures can exceed 40°C even during Ramadan months, leads to progressive dehydration through the day. Research in the British Journal of Nutrition has shown that even mild dehydration (1-2% body weight) increases cortisol, disrupts thermoregulation, and reduces sleep quality. The window between Iftar and Suhoor is often insufficient to fully rehydrate, particularly when caffeinated beverages are consumed.
Altered Social and Activity Patterns
Ramadan evenings are socially vibrant — family gatherings, Taraweeh prayers, community events, and late-night socialising shift bedtimes significantly later. Many UAE residents during Ramadan do not sleep until midnight or later. Combined with Suhoor at 4:30am, total sleep opportunity can drop to 4-5 hours — well below the 7-9 hours that research associates with optimal health.
Circadian Rhythm Misalignment
The combination of late meals, late light exposure (from social activities and screens), and early Suhoor waking creates what sleep researchers call "social jet lag" — a misalignment between your body's internal clock and your actual sleep-wake schedule. A 2019 study in Sleep Medicine Reviews found that Ramadan observers typically experience a 1.5-2 hour circadian delay, meaning their internal clock shifts later while obligations demand earlier waking.
Strategy 1: Protect Your Core Sleep Window
When total sleep time is reduced, protecting the quality of whatever sleep you get becomes critical. Sleep architecture research shows that the first 3-4 hours of sleep contain the highest proportion of deep (slow-wave) sleep — the stage responsible for physical recovery, immune function, and growth hormone release.
Strategy 2: Optimise Iftar and Suhoor for Sleep
What and when you eat around your sleep window directly impacts sleep quality.
Iftar Guidelines
Suhoor Guidelines
Strategy 3: Strategic Napping
When nighttime sleep is shortened, strategic daytime naps become a recovery tool rather than a luxury. Research from the Journal of Sleep Research confirms that naps under 30 minutes restore alertness and cognitive function without causing sleep inertia (grogginess) or interfering with nighttime sleep.
Many UAE workplaces during Ramadan have reduced hours, which creates an opportunity for an afternoon nap that is not available during the rest of the year. Use this window deliberately.
Strategy 4: Maximise Sleep Quality with Grounding
When sleep quantity is constrained — as it inevitably is during Ramadan — the quality of each hour matters more. This is where grounding (earthing) during sleep becomes particularly relevant.
A study by Ghaly and Teplitz (2004), published in the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, found that sleeping grounded normalised cortisol rhythms and improved subjective sleep quality across all participants. Grounded sleepers reported:
A grounding sheet connects to the earth via the grounding pin of your Type G socket (standard in the UAE). It requires no setup changes during Ramadan — simply sleep on it as normal. The conductive stainless steel fibres maintain contact with your skin throughout the night, providing continuous grounding during your entire sleep window.
For those who also nap during the day, using a grounding mat at your nap location extends the grounding benefit to your supplementary sleep as well.
Strategy 5: Light and Circadian Management
Light is the most powerful signal for setting your circadian clock. During Ramadan, deliberate light management can partially counteract the schedule disruption.
A Sample Ramadan Sleep Schedule
| Time | Activity | Sleep Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| 4:30am | Suhoor — dim light, pre-prepared meal | Minimise wakefulness and bright light |
| 5:00am | Fajr prayer | Return to sleep if schedule permits |
| 5:30-7:00am | Additional sleep or wake for work | Bright light exposure at wake time |
| 1:00-1:30pm | Post-Dhuhr 20-minute nap | Set alarm, dark quiet room |
| 7:00pm | Iftar — main meal early | Finish heavy eating by 8:30pm |
| 9:00pm | Taraweeh prayers / social | Limit caffeine, dim lights after |
| 10:30pm | Wind-down — dim lights, no screens | Cool bedroom to 18-19°C |
| 11:00pm | Sleep on grounding sheet, blackout room | Core sleep block: 5-5.5 hours |
This schedule yields approximately 5.5 hours of core nighttime sleep plus a 20-minute daytime nap — approximately 6 hours total. While below the ideal 7-9 hours, the strategies above ensure that each hour is as restorative as possible.
After Ramadan: Resetting Your Sleep Schedule
The transition back to a normal schedule after Eid can be challenging. Your circadian clock has adapted to the Ramadan pattern, and abruptly shifting back can cause several days of poor sleep.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much sleep do you need during Ramadan?
The ideal remains 7-9 hours, but this is rarely achievable during Ramadan. Research suggests that 5-6 hours of high-quality sleep (cool room, dark environment, consolidated sleep block) combined with a 20-minute daytime nap can maintain cognitive function and health throughout the month.
Is it better to sleep after Iftar or after Suhoor?
After Iftar. Your longest unbroken sleep block should begin 2-3 hours after Iftar, giving your digestive system time to settle. Sleeping after Suhoor is typically only 1-2 hours and fragments the final sleep cycle.
Can grounding sheets help during Ramadan specifically?
Yes. When total sleep time is reduced, the quality of each hour matters more. Grounding has been shown to improve sleep onset time, reduce nighttime awakenings, and normalise cortisol rhythms (Ghaly & Teplitz, 2004) — all of which maximise the restorative value of your shortened sleep window.
Should I avoid exercise during Ramadan?
Light to moderate exercise is fine and can improve sleep quality. Avoid intense exercise during fasting hours due to dehydration risk. The best time for exercise during Ramadan is 30-60 minutes after Iftar, when you have eaten and hydrated, or light walking before Iftar.
Why do I feel more tired during Ramadan even with naps?
Cumulative sleep debt, dehydration, circadian misalignment, and altered nutrition all contribute. Naps help but cannot fully replace lost nighttime sleep. Focus on protecting your core nighttime sleep block, hydrating aggressively between Iftar and Suhoor, and using the environmental strategies above to maximise the quality of every sleep hour.
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Written by
Dr. Sarah Mitchell
Sleep & Wellness Researcher
Sleep and wellness researcher with over 10 years of experience in circadian health, grounding science, and evidence-based recovery strategies. Dr. Mitchell brings a rigorous, science-first approach to understanding how grounding supports better sleep and overall well-being.
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