REM Sleep in 10 Hours of Sleep
10 hours of sleep gives you 6 complete sleep cycles and approximately 200 minutes of REM sleep.
Total REM Sleep
200 min
25% of total sleep
Sleep Cycles
6
complete 90-min cycles
REM breakdown by cycle at 10 hours
| Cycle | REM Sleep |
|---|---|
| Cycle 1 | 10 min |
| Cycle 2 | 20 min |
| Cycle 3 | 30 min |
| Cycle 4 | 40 min |
| Cycle 5 | 50 min |
| Cycle 6 | 50 min |
Frequently asked questions
How much REM sleep do you get in 10 hours?▾
In 10 hours (6 sleep cycles), you get approximately 200 minutes of REM — 25% of total sleep time.
Why does REM increase later in the night?▾
Each cycle's REM period grows longer as the night progresses — from ~10 min in cycle 1 to up to 50 min in cycles 4–5. Cutting sleep short disproportionately reduces total REM.
Is 20% REM sleep normal?▾
Yes. Healthy adults spend 20–25% of total sleep in REM. Lower amounts can indicate alcohol use, certain medications, or sleep disorders.
Other sleep durations
Try the interactive calculator: REM Sleep Calculator →