Sleep quality is one of the most consistently reported improvements among keto dieters. The mechanisms are multiple and well-supported by research.
Blood glucose fluctuations during the night — particularly the rebound hypoglycaemia that follows high-carbohydrate evening meals — disrupt sleep architecture by triggering cortisol release. Keto eliminates these fluctuations, allowing deeper, uninterrupted sleep stages.
Keto’s emphasis on animal proteins provides abundant tryptophan — the precursor to serotonin and melatonin. Higher tryptophan availability combined with reduced competition from carbohydrate-driven insulin means more reaches the brain and converts to sleep hormones.
Ketones may enhance adenosine signalling in the brain — the same pathway targeted by sleep-promoting drugs. This is a potential mechanism for the deeper, more restorative sleep reported by keto dieters.
Take magnesium glycinate (400mg) 1 hour before bed. Eat your last meal 2–3 hours before sleep. Avoid late caffeine. Try our sleep-supporting keto evening drinks including chamomile blends and bone broth. Build your evening meals around tryptophan-rich proteins.
Better sleep is one of keto’s most underrated benefits. For those struggling with sleep quality, dietary change may be more effective than any supplement.