Dim your screen to the lowest setting you can comfortably read at, starting 90 minutes before bed. That single change reduces the sleep disruption more than any blue-light-blocking glasses on the market.
Think of your phone like a nightclub sound system. Your body's clock doesn't care what frequency the music is playing at — it responds to how loud it is overall. Night Shift shifting your screen from "cool" to "warm" is like turning down the treble while leaving the speakers at full volume. The overall noise level is still there. Turn the volume down — dim the screen — and the problem mostly goes away.
The Verdict — Truth Engine
The mechanism is real. The billion-dollar product sold to fix it isn't.
What To Do About It
Dim your screen aggressively 90 minutes before bed. Target the lowest brightness you can comfortably read at. This is the single highest-leverage action — total luminance is the dominant variable, and everything else is secondary.
Get 20-30 minutes of bright light in the morning. Spending time in natural daylight — or near a 10,000 lux light box — within an hour of waking builds circadian resilience that protects you against evening screen disruption. This is the most underused sleep intervention in the field.
Use distance in the final hour. Moving from phone at arm's length to a TV across the room exponentially reduces how much light hits your eyes — the physics of distance does the work for you.
Use Night Shift or f.lux, but only combined with aggressive dimming. Color temperature shifting alone reduces melatonin suppression by only 4-11% — not enough to matter. Combined with dimming, it adds moderate additional protection.
Skip commercial blue-light glasses. Consumer products filter 10-25% of blue light. Research showing any circadian benefit used deep amber lenses filtering over 99%. The gap between product and evidence is enormous.
Dim your screen to the lowest setting you can read at, starting 90 minutes before bed.
Total brightness is the real driver of sleep disruption — not the color of the light. This one change does more than any blue-light glasses on the market.
Takes 5 seconds. No equipment. Do it tonight.The Verdict
Your phone does mess with sleep — but brightness is the culprit, not blue light alone.
17 separate studies, 619 people tested — zero measurable improvement in any objective sleep measurement from wearing blue-light glasses (Cochrane Review, 2023).
It's not the color of the light causing the problem — it's the total brightness. Your brain's clock responds to "how bright," not "what color," making the whole glasses premise wrong.
Dim your screen to the lowest legible setting 90 minutes before bed, and get 20 minutes of bright morning light. Those two changes beat any glasses on the market.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling ↓
How Confident Are We?
This is a split conviction finding — the mechanism sub-claim is HIGH, but the commercial intervention sub-claim is LOW.
A multicenter RCT (N>150) of individuals with screen-induced delayed sleep phase, using glasses with verified >95% filtering below 530nm, controlled daytime light exposure via wearable dosimeters, and ambulatory PSG as the primary endpoint. No such study currently exists.
Consumer screens emit 0.08-0.38% of the ICNIRP photochemical safety limit. No plausible study design could reverse this — the dosimetric gap is simply too large. This sub-claim is definitively LOW.
Go Deeper
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Join Free — The Verdict NewsletterThe Evidence
How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.
Approximate contribution to this goal, based on effect sizes from intervention research. These are practical estimates, not exact causal percentages.
Leverage confidence: High
Blue-light glasses showed zero significant improvement in any objective sleep metric for this goal.
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