Understanding evening cortisol
Evening cortisol should be at its lowest point of the day—typically dropping to under 1 ng/mL between 5-11 PM. This natural drop tells your body to produce melatonin and prepare for sleep.
Testing window: 5-11 PM, at least 30 minutes before your intended bedtime.
What influences evening cortisol
Your evening reading can be affected by:
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Caffeine timing: Even morning coffee can elevate evening cortisol in sensitive individuals
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Exercise timing: Workouts after 6 PM can keep cortisol elevated
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Screen time: Blue light exposure after 8 PM suppresses melatonin and sustains cortisol
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Late meals: Eating after 8 PM delays cortisol drop
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Stress rumination: Replaying the day or planning tomorrow
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Alcohol: Disrupts sleep architecture and cortisol patterns
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Room temperature: Sleeping in warm room (above 70°F) prevents proper cortisol decline
For accurate results: Test at the same time for 2-3 evenings to confirm the pattern.
What your evening cortisol results mean
Optimal evening cortisol (under 0.5 ng/mL)
What it suggests:
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Diurnal rhythm completion
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The body is biochemically ready for sleep
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Proper melatonin production
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Healthy HPA axis shutdown for the night
You might feel:
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Naturally drowsy
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Your mind quieting down
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Your Body relaxing easily
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Sleep onset within 15-20 minutes
What to do:
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Maintain your evening routine—it's working well
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Keep testing periodically during stressful periods to catch problems early
Remember: This is your ideal state—use it as your baseline to compare against during high-stress times.
Normal evening cortisol (0.5-1 ng/mL)
What it suggests:
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Healthy evening cortisol drop
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Good circadian rhythm
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Body is winding down appropriately
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Minor variations within normal range
You might feel:
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Tired and ready for bed
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It's easier to fall asleep on certain day
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Rested—sleep quality is generally good
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Occasional sleep issues related to specific stressors
What to do:
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Optimize your wind-down routine:
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Dim bright lights by 8:30 PM
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No screens after 9 PM
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Keep bedroom cool (65-68°F)
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Maintain a consistent bedtime
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Test your morning cortisol (we recommend 30 min after waking for consistency) to confirm full rhythm is healthy
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Retest if sleep quality declines to catch elevation early
Slightly elevated evening cortisol (1-2 ng/mL)
What it suggests:
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Cortisol not fully declining before bed
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Mild HPA axis dysregulation
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Sleep quality likely affected
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Early sign of rhythm disruption
You might feel:
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Sleep onset is delayed
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Your mind is still somewhat active
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Sleep needs to be "forced" with supplements or medication
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Wake ups once or twice during night
What to do:
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Aggressive evening wind-down protocol:
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Stop caffeine by 12 PM (or eliminate entirely for 2 weeks to reset)
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Move any exercise before 6 PM
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Power down all screens by 8 PM—try reading, stretching, or breathing exercises
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Magnesium glycinate: try 200-400mg 1 hour before bed
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Create a cool, dark room around 65-67°F with blackout curtains
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Assess evening stressors: Work emails? Difficult conversations? Planning tomorrow?
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Retest in 2 weeks to see if interventions are working
Moderately elevated evening cortisol (2-4 ng/mL)
What it suggests:
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Significantly disrupted diurnal rhythm
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HPA axis not shutting down at night
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Chronic stress or anxiety present
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Sleep architecture is compromised
You might feel:
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Tired but wired
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Your mind racing before sleep
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Very delayed sleep onset (1+ hours)
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Wake ups between 2-4 AM
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Poor sleep quality, despite 7-8 hours in bed
What to do:
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Eliminate all caffeine for 4 weeks minimum
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No screens after 7 PM: focus on relaxing and try a 90-minute wind down before bed
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Try therapy, counseling, or behavior support to address chronic stress
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Add bright light exposure in the morning and consider short-term sleep support for the evenings
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Test morning cortisol (within 60 min of waking) to see if you have inverted curve (low morning, high evening)
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Retest in 3-4 weeks and consult a doctor if no improvement occurs
High evening cortisol (4-8 ng/mL)
What it suggests:
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Severely disrupted circadian rhythm
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Possible inverted curve or flat curve
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Chronic HPA axis dysregulation
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Significant health risk if sustained
You might feel:
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Completely unable to fall asleep naturally
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Most alert and energized at night
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Exhausted all day
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Severe sleep deprivation accumulating
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Mood and cognitive issues
What to do:
Consult an endocrinologist—This level of disruption requires medical support. They may recommend the following tests, assessments, or interventions:
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Comprehensive hormone testing, including thyroid, sex hormones, and mapping your full cortisol curve.
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A sleep study to rule out sleep apnea or other sleep disorders
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Elimination of all stimulants, and potentially short-term medication to support sleep
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A strict light-dark cycle: bright light in morning, complete darkness at night
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A mental health assessment: chronic anxiety or PTSD can cause this pattern
Do not try to manage this alone—professional help is essential
Very high evening cortisol (above 8 ng/mL)
What it suggests:
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Extreme HPA axis dysregulation
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Possible Cushing's syndrome (rare but serious)
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Complete loss of circadian rhythm
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Medical emergency if sustained
You might feel:
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Extremely energized at night despite exhaustion
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It's impossible to sleep without strong medication
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Physical symptoms such as heart palpitations, anxiety, sweating
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Severe mood disturbances
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Weight gain, especially around midsection
What to do:
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See an endocrinologist immediately for urgent testing
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They may order tests such as late-night salivary cortisol (medical standard), 24-hour urinary free cortisol, and dexamethasone suppression
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Work with your physician to rule out Cushing's syndrome
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Document all symptoms: Write down everything—sleep, mood, weight changes, physical symptoms
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Do not delay—sustained cortisol this high causes serious health damage
Do not try to manage this alone with lifestyle changes—it requires medical diagnosis and treatment.
Bottom Line: Your evening cortisol is an extremely strong signal of sleep quality. Under 1 ng/mL = biochemically ready for sleep. Above 2 ng/mL = fighting your biology. Fix your evening cortisol, fix your sleep.









