Caffeine Cutoff Calculator

Calculate the latest time you should drink your last caffeinated beverage based on your target bedtime, your caffeine sensitivity, and the dose. Built on a pharmacokinetic decay model with Drake 2013 sleep-disruption evidence as the threshold. Math, not medical advice.

Inputs

When you want to fall asleep.

8 oz coffee ≈ 95 mg; 16 oz cold brew ≈ 200 mg; energy drink ≈ 80-300 mg; espresso shot ≈ 65 mg.

Recommended cutoff time

Predicted caffeine remaining at bedtime, by last-cup time:

How the math works

Caffeine clears the body via first-order pharmacokinetics: in each half-life, the remaining amount drops by 50%. The formula is remaining = dose × (0.5)^(hours_elapsed / half_life).

The cutoff target used here is when blood caffeine drops to ≤ 50 mg at bedtime — roughly equivalent to a half-cup of coffee. Drake et al. 2013 (PMID 24235903) showed that caffeine doses given 6 hours before bed reduced total sleep time by 40+ minutes; 50 mg is the practical “low enough to not disrupt sleep architecture” threshold.

For a 200 mg dose at average sensitivity (5h half-life), reaching 50 mg requires ~10 hours of decay (two half-lives). So if you want to be in bed at 22:30, your cutoff is 12:30 PM — earlier than most people realize.

Why “stop drinking 6 hours before bed” can still be too late

  • Higher doses extend the cutoff: a 300 mg dose at average sensitivity needs ~13 hours to drop below 50 mg.
  • Slow metabolizers (~50% of adults): oral contraceptives, pregnancy, certain CYP1A2 variants, and some medications (cimetidine, some antibiotics) extend half-life to 7-10 hours. The “stop by 2 PM for an 11 PM bedtime” rule does not apply.
  • Sleep onset is the most sensitive metric: even 50-100 mg at bedtime can fragment deep sleep architecture even if you fall asleep without subjective trouble.
  • Tolerance is partial: regular caffeine consumers feel less subjective stimulation but the sleep-disrupting effect is mostly preserved.

Author

  • Emily Collins 1

    Emily Collins, as a nutrition researcher, is responsible for providing in-depth insights and analysis on supplements and superfoods. Her articles on UsefulVitamins.com delve into the benefits, potential drawbacks, and evidence-based recommendations for various supplements and superfoods. Emily's expertise in nutrition research ensures that readers receive accurate and reliable information to make informed choices about incorporating these products into their health routines.

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