Why you keep waking in the middle of the night — and what the research says.
Waking around 3 a.m. does not always mean something is wrong. Brief awakenings are normal. But stress and hyperarousal can make these moments feel longer and more disruptive.
Cortisol is a normal hormone with a daily rhythm. When stress, anxiety, or a dysregulated sleep routine increase nighttime arousal, it can become harder to fall back asleep.
What Cortisol Normally Does
Cortisol follows a circadian rhythm.
It is usually low in the first half of the night.
It starts rising toward morning to help you wake up.
The cortisol awakening response peaks about 30–45 minutes after waking.
Why Stress Can Wake You at 3 A.M.
Chronic stress can keep the brain and body on alert even when you are tired. .
Elevated evening or nighttime stress activity may disrupt sleep.
In the second half of the night, sleep becomes lighter, so stress is more likely to wake you.
Cognitive arousal makes it harder to drift back to sleep.
Alcohol, caffeine, pain, menopause, sleep apnea, and blood sugar swings can also contribute.
Peer-Reviewed Findings
Meta-analysis: chronic insomnia is associated with moderately higher cortisol levels (Desai et al., 2022).
Review data show cortisol is normally lowest near midnight and rises toward morning as part of the sleep-wake rhythm (O’Byrne et al., 2021).
Stress-related sleep reactivity helps explain why some people have more trouble falling asleep after awakenings (Kalmbach et al., 2018).
Research reviews link higher evening stress activity with poorer sleep continuity and more nocturnal awakenings (Florsheim et al., 2018; Riemann et al., 2010).
What Actually Helps
How Cal Remedy Sleep Helps Tame Nighttime Cortisol
Cal Remedy Sleep combines calming, stress-support, and sleep-quality ingredients that help shift the body from “fight or flight” toward deeper, more restorative sleep.
Together, these 8 ingredients help support a healthier nighttime stress response so you can fall asleep easier, stay asleep longer, and wake up more refreshed.
Educational content only. This article summarizes peer-reviewed sleep and stress research and is not personal medical advice.
Selected sources: Riemann 2010; Florsheim 2018; Kalmbach 2018; O’Byrne 2021; Desai 2022.