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Sleep Regularity vs Duration: Why Consistency May Matter More
For years the entire sleep conversation has revolved around a single number: hours. Did you get your eight? It turns out we may have been optimising the wrong variable. A large analysis of wearable data suggests that when you sleep — how consistent your nights are — predicts long-term health even better than how long you sleep. If true, it quietly rewrites the advice most of us have been trying, and failing, to follow.
We've been optimising the wrong number
Sleep duration is the metric everyone chases because it's easy to count and easy to feel guilty about. But your body doesn't only care how long you were unconscious; it cares whether you kept an appointment. Sleep is governed by a body clock that runs best on a predictable schedule, and a night that starts and ends at wildly different times each day is, to that clock, a small dose of jet lag. The emerging research puts a number on how much that irregularity may cost — and it's not small.
What the study found
The headline evidence comes from a 2024 analysis published in the journal Sleep, which drew on more than 60,000 UK Biobank participants who wore accelerometers — over ten million hours of movement data — to calculate a "Sleep Regularity Index," a score for how similar someone's sleep-wake pattern is from one day to the next. The researchers then followed who died over the subsequent years. The finding was striking: sleep regularity was a stronger predictor of all-cause mortality than sleep duration. The most regular sleepers had, across the analysis, on the order of 20–48% lower all-cause mortality risk than the least regular, with similar patterns for deaths from cardiometabolic causes and cancer. In plain terms: consistency tracked with outcomes at least as powerfully as the hours everyone fixates on.
Same hours, different rhythm
A regular week vs a ragged one
Why regularity beats duration
The likely reason is that regularity is circadian health. Every cell in your body runs a daily rhythm, and those rhythms stay synchronised when the big daily cues — sleep, light, food — arrive on schedule. Shift your sleep by hours from one day to the next and you force those clocks to keep re-setting, a state closely related to the "social jet lag" of sleeping in on weekends. A regular schedule, by contrast, lets the whole system settle and do its overnight work — the deep and REM stages — without being repeatedly yanked out of phase. Duration still matters enormously; the point is that duration delivered on a chaotic schedule is worth less than the same duration delivered reliably.
How to raise your sleep regularity
The good news is that regularity is often easier to fix than duration, because it's about timing rather than finding extra hours:
- Anchor your wake time first. A consistent rise time — even on weekends — is the single most powerful lever; bedtime tends to follow it.
- Get morning light soon after waking to lock the clock in place each day.
- Keep the weekend swing under about an hour versus weekdays, to avoid re-jet-lagging yourself every Monday.
- Protect a consistent wind-down and watch late caffeine, which pushes bedtime later and erodes consistency.
- Track the trend, not the night. A wearable like the Agen Band can show whether your pattern is tightening over weeks — the thing that appears to matter.
What counts as "regular"?
You don't need clockwork perfection — you need a consistent target and small drift. As a practical rule of thumb, aim to keep your bedtime and wake time within roughly 30–60 minutes of the same slot most nights, weekends included. That's it; the goal is a recognisable rhythm, not a rigid one. This is also reassuring news for anyone whose schedule fights back — shift workers, new parents, frequent travellers. Nobody's SRI is perfect, and the research points to a gradient, not a pass-fail line: every bit of extra consistency you can claw back appears to help, even if some nights are simply out of your control. Tighten the pattern where you can and let the rest go.
The honest caveats
Two things keep this in proportion. First, it's an observational study: it shows a strong, repeated association, not proof that irregular sleep causes worse outcomes — irregular sleepers may differ in shift work, health, or lifestyle. Second, this is emphatically not permission to abandon duration; chronically short sleep remains a genuine problem, and the healthiest pattern is enough sleep and a steady schedule. The reframe is simply that consistency has been badly underrated, and it's a lever most people have never deliberately pulled.
The bottom line
New wearable-based research suggests the most important thing about your sleep may not be how long it lasts but how consistent it is — with the most regular sleepers showing meaningfully lower mortality risk than the most erratic, independent of duration. It's observational, so hold the certainty lightly, but the practical takeaway is refreshingly doable: pick a wake time and defend it, get morning light, and keep your nights on a rhythm. For where sleep sits among the highest-leverage habits, see building a longevity protocol. Educational only, not medical advice.


