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    How Blue Light Affects Your Sleep

    Are glasses and apps that block blue light effective? Research is mixed, though regulating light exposure is actually critical to healthy sleep.

    Person laying in bed at night looking at their phone which is casting light onto their face. Photo: Uwe Krejci/Getty Images

    Even if you know that looking at a phone, tablet, or computer screen at night is bad for your sleep, it’s hard to stop.

    That’s one reason there’s been a growing interest in glasses or apps that can block the blue parts of the light spectrum that experts say can be especially disruptive for sleep. This light doesn’t necessarily appear blue; it’s part of any bright white light, says Charles Czeisler, MD, chief of the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. 

    "Our light exposure between when the sun sets and the sun rises is probably the primary driver of sleep deficiency in our society," says Czeisler. That includes artificial light of all kinds, though light from electronic devices that emit that blue light—such as the LED displays in smartphones, tablets, and modern computer and television screens—may be particularly problematic for sleep, he says.

    But studies on the effects of using blue-blocking glasses and apps like f.lux or Apple’s Night Shift mode are limited—and the results are mixed.

    More on Sleep

    Some research indicates there may be some sleep quality benefits for blue-blocking glasses, especially for people with insomnia, though not necessarily for others. One 2021 study on Night Shift mode that looked at 167 undergrads found that in most cases, there were no sleep differences between those who used Night Shift, those who used their phones regularly before bed without Night Shift, and those who didn’t look at their phones at all before sleep.

    Most of that population was sleep deprived, however, getting less than seven hours a night. For participants who were not sleep deprived, those who didn’t look at their phones at all for an hour before bed had better sleep than those who did—whether they used Night Shift or not.

    Overall, experts say much more research is needed on how well these tools work, who might benefit the most, and how to best use them.

    Though there’s no harm in trying a blue light filter or blue blocking glasses, experts say that thinking about light exposure throughout the day may be even more useful. "It just depends on how many problems a person is having with their sleep," says Lisa Ostrin, OD, PhD, an assistant professor at the University of Houston College of Optometry who has conducted research into ways that blocking blue light affects sleep. 

    To see all of CR’s sleep coverage, go to our Guide to Better Sleep.

    How Light Affects Sleep

    To understand how glasses or apps might affect sleep, it helps to understand light’s role in the first place.

    We all have an approximately 24-hour internal clock known as a circadian rhythm that, among other things, helps determine when we feel sleepy and when we feel awake. Light and darkness regulate this rhythm, triggering the release of a hormone called melatonin that serves as a cue for sleep.

    "Light is a stimulant," says Alcibiades Rodriguez, MD, the medical director of the Comprehensive Epilepsy Center-Sleep Center at New York University. When blue-sensitive receptors in our eyes are first exposed to light in the morning, that sends a signal to the pineal gland of our brain that shuts off the production of melatonin.

    "Once you get exposed to that first light in the morning, you are supposed to fall asleep" 16 to 18 hours later, Rodriguez says. As darkness falls with night, our brains start to produce melatonin again, theoretically a couple of hours before we fall asleep.

    When it’s dark outside but light indoors, it confuses this physiological system and can push back the release of melatonin, making it harder to fall and stay asleep, according to Mariana Figueiro, PhD, director of the Lighting Research Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. The brighter the light, the stronger its ability to suppress the release of melatonin, which is why bright lights from phones, tablets, and other LED-lit devices have a particularly detrimental effect on sleep.

    "It has the potential to delay your sleep if you get that light in the evening hours," she says. An off-kilter circadian cycle not only makes it hard to get enough sleep but also increases the risk for various cancers and other diseases.

    How to Regulate Blue Light to Improve Sleep

    Get more sun during the day. The first thing you should do to make sure light doesn’t keep you awake at night is to get enough sunlight during the day, which can have a protective effect, Figueiro says.

    "Higher [daytime] light levels help you sleep better," she says. "It also helps you be less sensitive to that evening light." Sunlight is far brighter than any device we use. People who spend more time outside and get more daytime light exposure have better sleep, especially if they get that light early in the day. Even having a window in an office helps, according to one study.

    Reduce screen time at night. Some research shows that limiting blue light exposure at night may help improve sleep, especially if a person has trouble sleeping and gets a lot of evening light or looks at a screen before bed. This is particularly important for younger people, who are more sensitive to blue light.

    study comparing participants with an average age of 23 with those with an average age of 61 found that the younger participants were far more affected by blue light. Figueiro says that adolescents are more sensitive than people in their 20s and that younger kids—around age 7 or 8—are even more sensitive.

    Ideally, experts say, you’d shut down all screens at least an hour before bed, if not 2 hours. But for those who can’t—or won’t—do that, glasses or apps may help, though the evidence on that is not yet conclusive.

    Try special glasses. Glasses that block blue light are a better option than apps alone, according to Ostrin, because the right ones will cut out all light in the blue spectrum, from screens and from other electric lights.

    Ostrin says the most effective ones are cheap, tinted Uvex glasses (generally $10 or less) also used in labs. In 2016, Consumer Reports testing also showed that Uvex Skyper safety eyewear was the most effective at cutting out blue light.

    These types of glasses give everything you see an orange tint. Those that don’t give the world an orange or yellowish hue may feel less extreme, but that means they aren’t cutting out as much blue light. But don’t buy into all the marketing—research does not show that blue light from screens damages your eyes. (Lots of screen use can cause eye strain, however.)

    Set up apps that block blue light at night. If you can’t step away from screens at night completely and don’t want to buy glasses, you could try apps that change the light emitted by a display, according to Ostrin and Figueiro. There’s still very little published research done in this area, however, and existing studies have not shown clear benefits.

    If you’re using f.lux, Apple’s Night Shift mode, or other blue-light-reducing apps, turn the nighttime setting on all the way, which will make your screen appear orange. You should also turn the brightness down because any bright light—even orange-hued—can suppress melatonin production, according to Figueiro. (Read more about how to set up night mode on your computer or phone.)

    Whether or not these apps help, much of what we do with our electronic devices keeps us awake for psychological instead of physiological reasons, Figueiro says. 

    Checking the news or reading work email, for example, can be stressful and stimulating. That means that however much you are filtering out the blue light from a screen, "you are still awake, you are still doing something that is activating your brain, and you may still impact your sleep," she says.


    Kevin Loria

    Kevin Loria is a senior reporter covering health and science at Consumer Reports. He has been with CR since 2018, covering environmental health, food safety, infectious disease, fitness, and more. Previously, Kevin was a correspondent covering health, science, and the environment at Business Insider. Kevin lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife and children. Follow him on X: @kevloria.