Benefits of Reading Before Bed: Wind Down, Better Routines and Less Screen Time
Reading before bed can help create a calmer evening routine, reduce late screen time and give your mind a clearer signal that the day is ending.
Key benefits
- Creates a repeatable bedtime cue.
- Can reduce late screen use.
- Supports reading consistency without needing extra daytime time.
- Pairs well with journaling and better sleep habits.
- Low cost when using library books, second-hand books or e-readers with warm settings.
Why reading works as a wind down cue
A bedtime routine tells your brain what comes next. Reading gives you a quiet activity that is less stimulating than social media, emails or discovering at 11pm that strangers are wrong online.
What to read before bed
Choose something enjoyable but not too activating. Fiction, gentle non-fiction or familiar books often work well. Maybe avoid thrillers where every chapter ends with someone opening a suspicious basement door.
Paper book or e-reader?
Paper books are simple and screen-free. E-readers can work well if brightness is low and notifications are absent. Phones are riskier because one chapter can become one message, one video and then somehow it is Tuesday.
How to build the habit
Put the book where your phone normally goes. Start with five pages. The goal is not to demolish a novel every night, it is to create a consistent evening rhythm.
Related guides
These articles connect this habit with the wider BenefitsOf food, nutrient and lifestyle library.
Useful sources
FAQs
Is reading before bed good for sleep?
It can help some people wind down, especially when it replaces stimulating screen time.
How long should I read before bed?
Start with 5 to 20 minutes. Stop before it pushes bedtime later.
Is an e-reader okay before bed?
It can be, especially with low brightness and no notifications. A phone is usually more distracting.
What should I avoid reading before bed?
Avoid anything too stressful, work-heavy or so gripping that you keep reading far past bedtime.