Sleep by Profession
Roughly one in five American workers is on a non-standard schedule — a schedule that routinely puts their sleep need in conflict with their circadian rhythm. The sleep strategies that work for a 9-to-5 knowledge worker rarely survive contact with a night shift, a transcontinental flight, or a 24-hour hospital call. Find your profession below for evidence-based sleep tactics tailored to the job.
Nurse
Rotating 12-hour shifts (7a-7p, 7p-7a) with 3-4 shifts per week
Doctor/Physician
Variable: 10-12 hour days, 24-28 hour on-call shifts, early morning rounds starting 6-7 AM
Truck Driver
11-hour driving windows within 14-hour on-duty periods, with mandatory 10-hour off-duty rest (FMCSA Hours of Service)
Firefighter
24 hours on duty / 48 hours off duty, or 48/96 schedules, with unpredictable nighttime alarm responses
Police Officer
Rotating 8-12 hour shifts across days, evenings, and nights, often on 4-on/3-off or similar patterns
Software Engineer
Flexible hours, often 9 AM-6 PM with tendency toward late nights; on-call rotations for production support
Teacher
6:00 AM wake-up for 7:30-8:00 AM school start, with evening grading and lesson planning
Construction Worker
6:00 AM-4:00 PM typical, with some jobs starting as early as 5:00 AM; seasonal variation in hours
Pilot
Variable: early departures (4-5 AM report), red-eye flights, multi-day trips crossing time zones, regulated rest periods
Chef/Restaurant Worker
Split shifts or straight evening shifts, typically 2 PM-11 PM or 4 PM-1 AM, with weekend and holiday work
Paramedic/EMT
12 or 24-hour shifts with varying rotation patterns (24/48, 12-hour rotating, Kelly schedule)
Military
Highly variable: garrison duty (0500-1700), deployment rotations, 24-hour watches, field exercises with minimal sleep
Retail Worker
Variable: opening shifts (5-6 AM), closing shifts (until 10-11 PM), mid-shifts, weekend and holiday work required
Factory Worker
Rotating 8-12 hour shifts: days (6 AM-2 PM), afternoons (2 PM-10 PM), nights (10 PM-6 AM), often on 2-week rotations
Lawyer
Long and variable: 9 AM-8 PM typical, extending to midnight or later during trials, deals, and filing deadlines
New Parent
Fragmented: 2-3 hour sleep blocks aligned with infant feeding schedule for first 3-4 months, gradually consolidating
College Student
Highly irregular: class times vary daily, late-night studying, social activities, and inconsistent weekday/weekend patterns
Remote Worker
Flexible: typically 9 AM-5 PM but often extended; risk of working from bed and blurred boundaries
Executive/CEO
Long days: 5:30 AM-8:00 PM typical, with travel, evening events, and global time zone management
Athlete
Early morning training (5-7 AM), afternoon practice sessions, competition travel, and seasonal schedule variations
Medical Disclaimer
The information provided by Sleep Stack is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition or sleep disorder. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
Reviewed by Dr. Sarah Mitchell, PhD — Board-Certified Sleep Medicine · Last reviewed · Full disclaimer