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About 1 in 3 Americans say they’re sleep deprived, and these deficits are linked to serious illnesses like heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancer, and depression. Certain patterns of eating could lead to more nightly rest, translating into healthier, more satisfying lives.
Good sleep also stabilizes the body’s hunger hormones for less impulsive snacking the next day. “It’s a cycle,” says Marie-Pierre St-Onge, an associate professor of nutrition and director of Columbia University’s Irving Medical Center of Excellence for Sleep and Circadian Research. “If you eat better, you’ll sleep better and be more refreshed. And that helps you make better decisions for your diet.”
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]Here’s what to eat for better sleep.
Key to improving nighttime rest is picking an eating regimen with plenty of compounds that promote sleep. This doesn’t come down to any one food or ingredient. “It’s more of a holistic profile with various helpful components,” St-Onge says.
One of those is tryptophan, a building block of protein. The body doesn’t make any of it. Rather, we get tryptophan from food: yes, turkey, but also fish, eggs, yogurt, and nuts like walnuts, among other examples. Once eaten, tryptophan passes from the blood into the brain and becomes melatonin, the hormone that triggers sleepiness for nighttime shuteye.
There’s a hiccup, though: not much tryptophan enters the brain if other substances are competing to get in. But when we pair foods that have tryptophan with healthy carbohydrates, such as lentils or fruits, the cells throughout our bodies gobble up the competitors, clearing tryptophan’s path.
“We need tryptophan in combination with carbohydrate-rich foods,” says Arman Arab, a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard Medical School who specializes in nutrition.
The Mediterranean diet is one regimen loaded with bothtryptophan and healthy carbs—those with plenty of fiber. Like carbs, nutrients such as zinc, B vitamins, and magnesium play key roles in converting tryptophan into melatonin for better sleep, and the Mediterranean diet delivers each of these components. Spinach, barley, and whole wheat are great mates for tryptophan-rich foods. Arab recently found that people who follow the Mediterranean diet have better sleep quality and less insomnia. St-Onge has researched similar associations.
void foods that cause inflammationAn ideal diet leaves out foods with substances that could spoil your slumber. They include less healthy carbs like low-fiber, high-sugar cereals, bagels, and fruit juices. People who eat unhealthy carbs tend to wake up more frequently overnight, according to St-Onge’s research.
When frequently consumed, foods high in saturated fats (for instance, beef and chicken with the skin) also contribute to sleep problems.
A common denominator between unhealthy carbs and saturated fats is that they both produce inflammation across the body, an issue linked to lower sleep quality and duration, Arab says. A diet packed with these foods may also lead to excess weight gain, which can cause sleep apnea and pressure on the diaphragm, further disrupting sleep.
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People can use the Dietary Inflammatory Index to score their daily consumption of inflammatory foods. Scores improve with plenty of healthy, unsaturated fats, like the ones in salmon, nuts, and seeds. These foods are anti-inflammatory and prevalent in the Mediterranean diet—another reason this diet promotes sleep.
Having a wide variety of fruits and vegetables is optimal, says Erica Jansen, an assistant professor of nutritional epidemiology at the University of Michigan. The diversity can “spread out exposure to any one toxicant” such as pesticides or heavy metals—which may disrupt sleep—and it ensures plenty of polyphenols and micronutrients that support sleep partly by lowering inflammation. Jansen found that when women increased their daily fruit and vegetable consumption by three servings, they dramatically improved their sleep quality and insomnia symptoms.
Although the Mediterranean regimen is backed by the most research, other approaches could be just as beneficial if they offer the same sleep-promoting nutrients and compounds. Aim for diets with many vegetables, lower-sugar fruits, plant-based proteins, and unsaturated fats. “Such patterns probably influence sleep in the same way” as the Mediterranean approach, St-Onge says.
These strategies include the USDA’s Healthy Eating Index and the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension diet, or DASH. Arab didn’t find a strong link between DASH and having fewer insomnia symptoms, but some other research suggests it’s helpful. The Chinese Healthy Eating Index, another eating pattern with many sleep-supportive ingredients, is also associated with good sleep.
Some effects differ across individuals, so plug-and-play items to find what boosts your sleep, even if they’re not staples of a particular diet. A line of research points to Montmorency tart cherry juice, for example. It’s full of melatonin, as are kiwis, nutritional yeast, pumpkin seeds, edamame, tofu, and dairy products.
Many ingredients high in fiber can also be found beyond the Mediterranean diet. These sleep-promoting foods include black beans, split peas, sweet potatoes, chia seeds, and flaxseeds.
Like most things in life, timing matters. Research shows that having meals too close to bedtime can hinder sleep. It’s important to wrap up eating for the day a few hours before turning in for the night.
This final meal could feature a plant-based protein such as tofu—which is filling, contains tryptophan, and keeps inflammation low—and a healthy carb like chickpeas to support tryptophan’s passage into the brain. Time it 2-4 hours before bed; that’s how long it takes for tryptophan levels in the body to peak.
Foods that are heavy or have too much sugar or spice, when eaten before bed, are especially likely to cause bloating, blood sugar spikes, and a night of tossing and turning, Jansen says.
Sleep is also disturbed at the other extreme: being really hungry at bedtime. To avoid this scenario, get a headstart on nutrition in the morning. “Wherever we look, individuals who have breakfast, sleep better,” St-Onge says. Keep the same timing each day as much as possible, Jansen adds. “Maintaining a consistent pattern is really important for sleep.”
There is an exception to the rule about wrapping up nutrition several hours before bed. Pouring through this loophole could be some of your favorite liquids. The research isn’t conclusive, but a variety of teas, such as chamomile and lemon balm, have relaxing compounds that seem to improve sleep, at least for some “super responders,” St-Onge says. Low-fat milk, rich in tryptophan, may help as well. “There’s no harm in trying them” about an hour before bedtime; they’re absorbed faster than food.
Melatonin supplements are another matter. While these pills may help with occasional bouts of insomnia or jet lag, even small doses “go beyond what’s needed for sleep,” an excess that may cause health problems with regular use, Jansen explains.
Food affects the bacteria in the digestive tract, known as the microbiome, and the right bacteria may help reduce inflammation. In theory, “If we can improve our microbiota, it could reduce inflammation in the body and lead to better sleep,” Arab says.
Some early research suggests that certain gut bacteria play a role in converting tryptophan into sleep hormones. A study in 2022 found that mice given prebiotics had more rapid-eye movement and other relaxing forms of sleep. According to a recent research review, consuming prebiotics and probiotics improves sleep quality in humans.
Instead of probiotic supplements, though, eating yogurt, kimchi, and other fermented foods will support the microbiome as part of a natural, healthy diet. More research is needed on “sleepbiotics,” whether pills or food, to know their effect on slumber, Jansen says.
People who follow these dietary patterns regularly have better sleep outcomes than those who merely dabble in them, several studies show. Whichever sleep-promoting diet you choose, stick with it. For the biggest improvements in sleep, “make sure you have a healthy diet day in, day out,” St-Onge says. “Give it a week or two” before expecting to see benefits.
The relationship between food and sleep goes both ways. Just as a healthy diet with sleep-promoting compounds leads to better sleep, better sleep leads to healthier food choices. By the same token, less sleep changes hunger hormones for worse decisions. “After sleeping poorly, you should be extra vigilant about a healthy diet to get back on track,” St-Onge says.
Jansen is a good example. With her one-year-old interrupting sleep, “I keep in mind that, because I was up all night, I’ll crave more energy-dense foods,” she says. “So I try not to give in to that.”
She also has a healthy breakfast to “get off on a good nutritional foot.” A related strategy when sleep-deprived is to begin the day with a veggie starter. When people have a salad or other vegetable before a carb-heavy breakfast, their appetites and blood sugar tend to be more stable the rest of the day. This could prevent a cycle of several nights of bad sleep and poor nutrition. “You can break the cycle,” St-Onge says.