MARIBYRNONG & HOBSONS BAY
Home » News » Study finds sleep and sport don’t mix

Study finds sleep and sport don’t mix

Exercise too close to bedtime may affect sleep duration, timing and quality, new research led by Monash University has found.

Published in Nature Communications, the study found that exercising four hours or less before bedtime was linked to falling asleep later, getting less and worse quality sleep, and having a higher resting heart rate and lower heart rate variability. It is the first and largest study to identify this.

The study involved an international sample of 14,689 people monitored across one year, resulting in four million nights of data. They wore a multi-sensor biometric device (WHOOP Strap) to record exercise, sleep and cardiovascular data.

Monash and WHOOP researchers examined the relationships between evening exercise, exercise strain, sleep and nocturnal cardiac activity, including resting heart rate and heart rate variability.

The combination of later exercise timing and higher exercise strain was associated with delayed sleep onset, shorter sleep duration, lower sleep quality, higher nocturnal resting heart rate and lower nocturnal heart rate variability.

The results were adjusted for gender, age, weekday, season, general fitness and the prior night’s sleep. High strain exercise includes activities that lead to sustained increases in breathing rate, core body temperature, heart rate and mental alertness.

Examples include high-intensity interval training, football and rugby games or a long run.

First author Dr Josh Leota, from the Monash University School of Psychological Sciences, said he wanted to shed light on “the important yet puzzling” link between the timing of exercise and sleep.

“Intense exercise in the evening can keep the body in a heightened state of alertness, which is why public health guidelines have previously advised against working out too close to bedtime. However, findings from controlled laboratory studies are less conclusive, with many suggesting that evening exercise doesn’t necessarily disrupt sleep,” he said.

“These studies have relied on small sample sizes and laboratory settings, and rarely involved exercise bouts that elicit substantial cardiometabolic demand on the body, calling into question the external validity of such findings.”

Senior author Dr Elise Facer-Childs, from the Monash University School of Psychological Sciences, said the results of the study were significant.

“Our novel and timely findings have significant implications for public health messaging around timing, duration and intensity of exercise and present a critical step towards improving population sleep health—an issue of central importance given two in three Australian adults report at least one sleep problem and one in five adults fail to achieve the recommended seven or more hours of sleep per night.”

To read the study, visit: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-58271-x

Digital Editions


  • Community Calendar

    Community Calendar

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533209 Join Hobsons Bay Community Fund as a committee member The Hobsons Bay Community Fund is seeking new volunteer…

More News

  • Neighbourhood house hosts garage sale

    Neighbourhood house hosts garage sale

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532968 While most people buy and sell second hand goods online these days, the West Footscray Neighbourhood House (WFNH) is giving people the chance…

  • Models never go out of style

    Models never go out of style

    Iconic Melbourne band and ARIA Hall of Fame inductees, Models bring their post-punk -new wave vibes to Kindred Bandroom in Yarraville on Friday 20 February. When they formed in the…

  • Altona North lewd act investigated

    Altona North lewd act investigated

    Police are appealing for public assistance to help identify a man following a lewd act in Altona North last year. The incident took place near the corner of Millers Road…

  • RAAF sale under fire

    RAAF sale under fire

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 532416 The federal government’s announcement that it will sell off defence sites in the western suburbs, including RAAF Base Point Cook, has been met…

  • Backwash and bridge reimagined

    Backwash and bridge reimagined

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531190 For more than 20 years, multi-disciplinary artist Carmel Cosgrove has explored the layered cultural and environmental histories of Melbourne’s western suburbs, observing how…

  • Clean up with new council app

    Clean up with new council app

    As councillors, we often hear from the community about getting the basics right, with waste and recycling a frequent topic of conversation. It’s exciting to see council take steps to…

  • Boy seriously injured in electric motorbike crash

    Boy seriously injured in electric motorbike crash

    A teenage boy has been left with suspected broken legs after crashing his electric motorbike in Altona North on Monday afternoon. The unlicensed 17-year-old was overtaking stationary traffic when he…

  • Footscray patrols reducing safety: report

    Footscray patrols reducing safety: report

    Security guard patrols in the Footscray CBD have made the area less safe and should be immediately scrapped according to research conducted by an organisation opposed to the trial program.…

  • ED closing date set

    ED closing date set

    Footscray Hospital’s emergency team wants the community to be aware of a very specific time – 8am on Wednesday 18 February. “That’s when the emergency department at the original Footscray…

  • Thelma celebrates centenary

    Thelma celebrates centenary

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 533067 When Thelma Powell blew out the candles on her 100th birthday cake on Monday, she did it in the same suburb where she…