Some people feel great on 5 hours; you're tired after 8. It isn't discipline — it's the DEC2/ADRB1 genes that set each person's sleep quota. Here's how to find the right sleep number for your body.
You've met that person who sleeps 5 hours and bounces up fully charged, while you're groggy after 8. This isn't about discipline — it's about genetics. Each of us has a different "sleep quota."
Researchers found that some people carry mutations in DEC2 or ADRB1 that let them feel fully rested on just 4–6 hours, with no health downside — but this group is extremely rare. So if you force yourself to sleep less and feel wrecked, you're simply not one of them. It's worth noting that population-scale (biobank) studies suggest sleep duration is largely polygenic — driven by many small-effect variants rather than a single gene.
Beyond "how much," genes also set "when" you sleep best — early lark or night owl. More in the genetics of your chronotype.
Good sleep is foundational to long-term health and even longevity — see optimizing sleep for a longer life. Poor sleep also feeds back into how your DNA shapes stress and mood.
Don't call yourself "lazy" for needing more sleep than others, and don't force yourself onto the schedule of someone whose genes differ from yours. The best sleep is the sleep that matches your own body. Curious about your sleep and health tendencies? Start with the future of DNA-based wellness.
1. So do I really need 8 hours?
Not for most people. 8 hours is a solid average, but some need 7 or 9, depending on genes and lifestyle.
2. Can my body adapt if I train myself to sleep less?
Very rarely. Most people who think they thrive on little sleep are just tolerating short-term deprivation — different from a true genetic short sleeper.
3. Can a DNA test tell me how many hours I should sleep?
Yes. A DNA test can indicate your sleep-need tendency and your chronotype.