Dim your evening light
Lower overall light intensity at night — the lever that actually moves your clock.
Why it works
Bright light in the evening delays the circadian clock and suppresses melatonin, the hormone signaling biological night. The dominant factor is total light intensity and timing, not just screen color — bright overhead lighting after dusk tells the brain it is still daytime and pushes your sleep window later.
How to do it
- Lower overall light in the last hour or two before bed — fewer, dimmer, warmer lamps.
- Switch off bright overhead lights in favor of low, warm sources.
- Keep the bedroom dark for sleep; small light sources can still intrude.
Evidence
Evening light suppressing melatonin and delaying circadian phase is well documented, with brighter light producing larger suppression and delay. (rct)
Total light intensity and timing matter more than screen "blue light" specifically; dimming the room beats only filtering a screen.
Sources
- Gooley et al. (2011), exposure to room light before bedtime suppresses melatonin, J. Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Common mistake
Focusing on screen filters while leaving bright overhead lights blazing — the room’s overall brightness is the bigger driver.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach turns evening dimming into a concrete wind-down cue and helps you change the actual light environment, not just toggle a screen setting.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).