Few things wreck a night’s sleep like a hot, sticky bedroom tossing, turning, flipping the pillow to the cool side, kicking off every sheet. There’s a reason for it: your body needs to lower its core temperature to fall and stay asleep, and heat makes that job much harder. The fix is to attack the warmth from three angles your room, your body, and your bed.
Here are ten ways to sleep in hot weather.
Cool Your Room
1. Block out daytime heat. Keep blinds and curtains closed during the hottest part of the day to stop your bedroom heating up like a greenhouse. Blackout curtains help most.
2. Create a cross-breeze at night. Once it’s cooler outside than in, open windows on opposite sides of your home to let air flow through. Position a fan to push hot air out or pull cool air in.
3. Try a DIY “air conditioner.” Place a bowl of ice or a frozen water bottle in front of a fan — as the ice melts, the fan blows cooler, moister air over you. If you have AC, set it to a comfortable cool rather than freezing.
Cool Your Body
4. Take a lukewarm shower before bed. A cool-ish (not ice-cold) shower lowers your body temperature and rinses off sweat, helping you feel comfortable as you get into bed.
5. Wear light, breathable sleepwear or less. Loose, natural fabrics like cotton wick moisture and let your skin breathe. Heavy or synthetic pyjamas trap heat.
6. Cool your pulse points. Pressing a cool, damp cloth or an ice pack (wrapped in a towel) to your wrists, neck, or ankles helps lower your temperature quickly. Sleeping with your hands and feet outside the covers helps release heat, too.
7. Stay hydrated. Sip water through the evening so you don’t wake up dehydrated — just don’t overdo it right before bed, or you’ll be up for the bathroom.
Cool Your Bed
8. Switch to breathable bedding. Lightweight cotton or linen sheets are far cooler than flannel or synthetics. In peak heat, a single sheet often beats a duvet.
9. Try the cool-sheet trick. Pop your sheets or pillowcase in a bag in the freezer for a little while before bed for a blissfully cool start to the night. A “hot” water bottle filled with cold water works too.
10. Consider a cooling topper or pad. If hot nights are a regular problem, a breathable or cooling mattress topper and a cooling pillow can make a lasting difference.
A Few More Tips
Avoid heavy meals, alcohol, and intense exercise close to bedtime, as all raise your body temperature. Keep your usual sleep schedule as much as you can, even when nights are rough. And if you’re caring for babies, older adults, or anyone vulnerable during a heatwave, take extra care to keep them cool and hydrated extreme heat can be genuinely dangerous.
The Bottom Line
To sleep in hot weather, cool all three: your room (block daytime sun, cross-breeze, fan-plus-ice), your body (cool shower, light sleepwear, chilled pulse points, hydration), and your bed (breathable sheets, the freezer trick, a cooling topper). Stack a few of these together and even a warm night can turn into a surprisingly restful one.