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Do You Burn Calories When You Sleep?

REVIEWED BY
Bill Maish, MD
Clinical Content Consultant
Published
May 31, 2026
Last updated
May 30, 2026
Quick answer:

Yes — you burn roughly 40 to 80 calories per hour during sleep, totaling 300 to 600 calories over a full night, driven by your basal metabolic rate. Your metabolic rate is about 15% lower during sleep than waking rest, but REM sleep burns more than deep sleep because brain activity spikes to near-waking levels during that stage.

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Table of contents

Key Takeaways

  • You burn roughly 40-80 calories per hour during sleep, totaling 300-600 calories over a full night.
  • Your basal metabolic rate (BMR) drives most nighttime calorie burn, powering brain function, breathing, circulation, and tissue repair.
  • REM sleep burns more calories than deep NREM sleep because of increased brain activity.
  • Poor sleep disrupts hormones like leptin, ghrelin, and insulin, which can slow metabolism and increase fat storage.
  • Muscle mass, age, thyroid function, and sleep quality all influence how many calories you burn at night.

How Your Body Burns Calories During Sleep

Your basal metabolic rate keeps running

Your basal metabolic rate (BMR) is the energy your body needs to maintain basic life functions at complete rest. It accounts for 60-75% of your total daily energy expenditure. Even during sleep, your body runs a constant workload:

  • Your heart pumps roughly 5 liters of blood per minute
  • Your lungs cycle through 12-20 breaths per minute
  • Your brain consumes about 20% of your resting energy, processing memories and clearing metabolic waste
  • Your cells divide, repair damage, and synthesize proteins
  • Your liver processes nutrients and detoxifies compounds
  • Your kidneys filter blood and produce urine

All of this costs energy. Sleep is metabolically active, just differently active than wakefulness. Your body isn't resting. It's doing maintenance.

Hormonal work happens at night

Sleep is when your body ramps up production of growth hormone, which drives tissue repair, muscle recovery, and fat metabolism. Research published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism demonstrated that the majority of daily growth hormone secretion occurs during deep sleep.

This hormonal activity requires energy and directly affects how you burn calories when you sleep. Growth hormone stimulates lipolysis (fat breakdown), and the metabolic cost of tissue repair during sleep is significant. Your body is essentially running a construction crew every night.

Your brain never fully powers down

Your brain accounts for roughly 20% of your resting calorie burn, and it stays busy during sleep. During REM sleep, brain activity approaches waking levels as it consolidates memories, processes emotions, and clears waste products through the glymphatic system. This neural housekeeping burns real energy.

How Many Calories Do You Burn While Sleeping?

The math behind nighttime calorie burn

A rough estimate uses your BMR divided by 24 (to get hourly rate), then multiplied by hours of sleep. For a 155-pound person with a BMR of about 1,500 calories per day, that's roughly 63 calories per hour, or about 500 calories over eight hours of sleep.

Your actual number depends on several factors:

  • Body weight: Larger bodies burn more calories at rest because they have more tissue to maintain
  • Muscle mass: Muscle is more metabolically active than fat tissue, even during sleep
  • Age: BMR decreases roughly 1-2% per decade after age 20
  • Sex: Men typically have higher BMRs due to greater muscle mass and testosterone levels
  • Thyroid function: Your thyroid hormones (T3 and T4) regulate metabolic rate around the clock

Sleep burns fewer calories than waking rest

Your metabolic rate during sleep is about 15% lower than your resting metabolic rate while awake. A study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition measured energy expenditure in a metabolic chamber and confirmed that sleeping metabolism dips below waking rest. This happens primarily because muscle tone decreases, body temperature drops slightly, and sympathetic nervous system activity declines.

That 15% reduction is why you can't simply multiply your waking resting metabolic rate by sleep hours to calculate nighttime calorie burn. The number is real, just slightly lower than you might expect.

What Affects Your Nighttime Calorie Burn

Muscle mass is the biggest lever

Pound for pound, muscle tissue burns roughly three times more calories at rest than fat tissue. People with more lean mass have higher BMRs, which translates directly to more calories burned during sleep. This is one reason why resistance training affects metabolism beyond the workout itself.

Even at 3 a.m., your muscles are quietly burning fuel for protein turnover and cellular maintenance. Two people of identical weight can burn significantly different calories during sleep based on their body composition alone.

Thyroid hormones set the pace

Your thyroid gland produces hormones (T3 and T4) that control how fast your cells convert nutrients to energy. An underactive thyroid (hypothyroidism) can reduce your BMR by 15-40%, meaning you burn significantly fewer calories during sleep. An overactive thyroid (hyperthyroidism) does the opposite, sometimes dramatically.

If your nighttime metabolism feels sluggish, manifesting as easy weight gain despite reasonable eating, thyroid function is one of the first things to check. It's a simple blood test that reveals a powerful metabolic lever.

What you eat before bed

Food intake before sleep can slightly increase nighttime energy expenditure through the thermic effect of food (the energy cost of digestion). Protein has the highest thermic effect at 20-30% of calories consumed. Carbohydrates cost about 5-10%, and fats about 0-3%.

However, eating too close to bedtime can also disrupt sleep quality, which may offset any metabolic benefit. The net effect depends on what you eat, how much, and how well you sleep afterward.

Room temperature plays a role

Your body expends energy maintaining its core temperature. In a cooler room, your metabolism works slightly harder to generate heat, a process called thermogenesis. Research suggests that sleeping in a room around 66 degrees Fahrenheit activates brown adipose tissue, which burns calories to produce heat. A warmer room reduces this thermogenic effect.

Sleep Stages and Energy Expenditure

REM sleep burns more than deep sleep

Not all sleep stages cost the same amount of energy. During REM sleep, your brain activity spikes to near-waking levels. Your brain is your most energy-hungry organ, consuming roughly 6 calories per hour during rest and considerably more during active processing. REM stages, with their vivid dreaming and memory consolidation, drive higher calorie burn than any other sleep phase.

During deep NREM sleep (stage 3), brain activity and metabolic rate drop to their lowest points. This is the most restorative stage, where growth hormone peaks and tissue repair accelerates. But the overall energy cost is lower than REM because neural activity is minimal.

Sleep architecture matters for total burn

The proportion of time you spend in each sleep stage affects your total nighttime calorie burn. People who get more REM sleep burn slightly more calories overall. Research from Obesity Reviews found that disrupted sleep architecture, with less time in both REM and deep sleep, is associated with metabolic dysfunction and reduced energy expenditure.

This is why core sleep quality matters for metabolism, not just total hours. Eight hours of fragmented sleep and eight hours of solid sleep produce very different metabolic outcomes.

How Poor Sleep Disrupts Metabolism

Hunger hormones go haywire

Sleep deprivation throws your appetite-regulating hormones off balance. A landmark study in Annals of Internal Medicine found that restricting sleep to four hours for two nights reduced leptin (the hormone that signals fullness) by 18% and increased ghrelin (the hunger hormone) by 28%.

The result: you feel hungrier and crave high-calorie, high-carb foods after poor sleep. Your body is biologically pushing you toward caloric surplus, not because you need the energy, but because disrupted sleep sends false scarcity signals to your brain.

Insulin sensitivity drops

Even one night of insufficient sleep can reduce insulin sensitivity. When your cells respond poorly to insulin, your body stores more glucose as fat instead of using it for energy. A study published in Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences linked chronic short sleep to increased risk of type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome.

This insulin resistance doesn't just affect daytime metabolism. It influences how your body processes energy during subsequent sleep cycles too, creating a compounding effect.

Cortisol stays elevated

Poor sleep keeps cortisol (your stress hormone) elevated into the evening and night. High cortisol promotes visceral fat storage, breaks down muscle tissue, and disrupts the normal metabolic rhythm your body relies on for efficient calorie burning.

Over time, this pattern reduces your BMR by eroding lean mass, making it harder to lose weight during sleep or during the day. It's a cycle that compounds: less sleep leads to more cortisol, which leads to less muscle, which leads to lower metabolism.

How to Support Healthy Nighttime Metabolism

Prioritize sleep quality and duration

Getting 7-9 hours of quality sleep supports normal hormone cycling, healthy BMR, and efficient nighttime calorie burn. Consistent sleep and wake times help stabilize your circadian rhythm, which directly regulates metabolic rate. Even small improvements in REM sleep quality can influence how your body handles energy at night.

Build and maintain muscle mass

Resistance training increases lean mass, which raises your BMR around the clock. More muscle means more calories burned during sleep, every single night. You don't need to become a bodybuilder. Consistent strength training two to three times per week makes a measurable difference in resting metabolic rate over months.

Manage stress and cortisol

Chronic stress keeps cortisol elevated, which suppresses growth hormone, breaks down muscle, and promotes fat storage, all of which reduce nighttime calorie burn. Stress management techniques like deep breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, or journaling before bed help your cortisol drop to its natural nighttime low.

If sleep anxiety is an issue, addressing it directly supports both sleep quality and metabolism. Your body can't efficiently burn calories when your stress response is running all night.

Avoid late-night alcohol

Alcohol disrupts sleep architecture, suppressing REM sleep and reducing deep sleep quality. Even moderate drinking before bed has been shown to decrease overnight growth hormone secretion by up to 75%. If you want to maximize the calories you burn when you sleep, cutting alcohol close to bedtime is one of the highest-impact changes you can make.

Keep your bedroom cool

A cool sleeping environment (around 65-68 degrees Fahrenheit) can slightly boost nighttime calorie burn through thermogenesis and may improve sleep quality. Your body naturally drops its core temperature during sleep, and a cool room supports this process rather than fighting it.

Your Metabolism Tells a Story

The calories you burn during sleep are driven by hormones, muscle mass, thyroid function, and sleep architecture. These aren't things you can feel, but they're absolutely things you can measure.

Superpower's 100+ biomarker panel covers fasting glucose, insulin, thyroid hormones, cortisol, and metabolic markers that reveal exactly how your body is using energy. Stop wondering how many calories you burn at night and start knowing. Get your Superpower panel and see your metabolism in high definition.

FAQs

Most people burn between 300 and 600 calories during 8 hours of sleep. The exact number depends on your body weight, muscle mass, age, sex, and metabolic rate. A 155-pound person with an average BMR burns roughly 500 calories over a full night. People with more muscle mass or higher thyroid activity burn more.

You actually burn slightly fewer calories sleeping than sitting quietly awake. Your metabolic rate drops about 15% during sleep compared to waking rest. Watching TV involves minimal physical activity but keeps your brain and muscles at baseline waking levels, which costs marginally more energy than sleep.

Adequate sleep supports weight management, but sleeping more hours doesn't directly burn significantly more calories. The bigger effect is hormonal: sufficient sleep keeps leptin, ghrelin, and insulin balanced, reducing hunger and improving how your body processes energy, according to a systematic review in Sleep Medicine Reviews. Poor sleep drives cravings, insulin resistance, and fat storage.

Yes. Your body burns calories during any sleep period, day or night. However, daytime sleep may be slightly less metabolically efficient because it conflicts with your circadian rhythm, according to a review in Translational Psychiatry. Your core body temperature, hormone secretion, and metabolic rate are optimized for nighttime sleep. Daytime naps still burn calories but may not provide the same metabolic benefits.

Moderate exercise can slightly elevate your metabolic rate for hours after the workout, a phenomenon called excess post-exercise oxygen consumption (EPOC). If you exercise in the evening, some of that elevated calorie burn carries into sleep. However, intense exercise too close to bedtime may disrupt sleep quality, which could offset the metabolic benefit.

REM sleep burns the most calories because brain activity spikes to near-waking levels. Your brain is your most energy-demanding organ, and the intense neural processing during REM (dreaming, memory consolidation) drives higher energy expenditure compared to deep NREM sleep, when brain activity reaches its lowest point.

References

  1. Van Cauter, E., & Plat, L. (1996). Physiology of growth hormone secretion during sleep. The Journal of pediatrics, 128(5 Pt 2), S32-7. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0022-3476(96)70008-2
  2. Zhang, K., Sun, M., Werner, P., Kovera, A. J., Albu, J., Pi-Sunyer, F. X., & Boozer, C. N. (2002). Sleeping metabolic rate in relation to body mass index and body composition. International journal of obesity and related metabolic disorders : journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity, 26(3), 376-83. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ijo.0801922
  3. Minkel, J., Moreta, M., Muto, J., Htaik, O., Jones, C., Basner, M., & Dinges, D. (2014). Sleep deprivation potentiates HPA axis stress reactivity in healthy adults. Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association, 33(11), 1430-4. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0034219
  4. Spiegel, K., Tasali, E., Penev, P., & Van Cauter, E. (2004). Brief communication: Sleep curtailment in healthy young men is associated with decreased leptin levels, elevated ghrelin levels, and increased hunger and appetite. Annals of internal medicine, 141(11), 846-50. https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-141-11-200412070-00008
  5. Donga, E., van Dijk, M., van Dijk, J. G., Biermasz, N. R., Lammers, G. J., van Kralingen, K. W., Corssmit, E. P., & Romijn, J. A. (2010). A single night of partial sleep deprivation induces insulin resistance in multiple metabolic pathways in healthy subjects. The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism, 95(6), 2963-8. https://doi.org/10.1210/jc.2009-2430
  6. Sondrup, N., Termannsen, A. D., Eriksen, J. N., Hjorth, M. F., Færch, K., Klingenberg, L., & Quist, J. S. (2022). Effects of sleep manipulation on markers of insulin sensitivity: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Sleep medicine reviews, 62, 101594. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.smrv.2022.101594
  7. Walker, W. H., Walton, J. C., DeVries, A. C., & Nelson, R. J. (2020). Circadian rhythm disruption and mental health. Translational psychiatry, 10(1), 28. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-020-0694-0

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