REM vs Deep: The Most Important Type of Sleep (2024)

Jessica Del Pozo, Ph.D.

Being Awake Better

Sleep

REM and deep sleep are commonly confused. Is one better than the other?

Posted June 4, 2022 | Reviewed by Vanessa Lancaster

Key points

  • While all types of sleep appear to be essential, deep wave sleep could be considered the most essential.
  • If your sleep is restless and non-restorative, you may lack sufficient deep sleep.
  • REM sleep assists memory differently than deep sleep, focusing on social-emotional memories and even salvaging forgotten memories.

"I have to get my deep REM sleep," expresses a common confusion about two very different types of sleep. Deep sleep and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep are not the same; they do not even overlap. They each have different brain wave patterns and physiological characteristics, occur at different times of our sleep cycle, and play different roles in our wellbeing. Which is most important?

While all types of sleep appear to be essential, deep wave sleep could be considered the most essential. It does many things for us, supporting our entire central nervous system. Its signature move makes us feel restored when we get it and unrefreshed when we don’t. If your sleep is restless and non-restorative, you may lack sufficient deep sleep. If you have trouble retaining new information, you may be lacking REM and/or deep sleep.

REM vs Deep: The Most Important Type of Sleep (2)

Deep sleep is restorative.

Source: bruniewska/Shutterstock

Both types of sleep occur several times throughout the night. (Reading about the stages of sleep can be confusing because the 4th type listed is often REM, but Stage 4 sleep is deep. Stages 3 and 4 are often lumped together as deep sleep, thus much confusion).

One sleep cycle is about 90 minutes, so we typically sleep for four to six cycles per night. Some cycles have more deep delta sleep, some more REM. Some have both. No cycle is exactly like another because that is just how intricate and specialized our whole system is.

REM and deep have important differences. Let's start with deep wave sleep. It goes by many names, including delta wave sleep (its predominant brain wave), Stage 3-4, Stage 3 or Stage 4 Sleep.

Deep Wave Sleep

  • Deep sleep is one type, the deepest type of non-REM sleep. I like to think of it as when our sleep sleeps.
  • Slow delta brain waves oscillate at about two to four waves per second and make up less than 25 percent of our nightly slumber.
  • Deep sleep occurs after shallow sleep (Stages 1 and 2) within a 90-minute sleep cycle.
  • Deep sleep is generated from the frontal lobe and displays the brain at its most coordinated. It is synchronized with other brain waves, unlike the disharmony of wave patterns during REM sleep.
  • This “neural resonance” may help the lymphatic system cleanse our brains by flushing them of beta-amyloid plaques and misshapen proteins associated with Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Deep sleep is more prevalent in the first half of the night. The brain seems to prioritize it, dipping down into deep sleep about an hour after you nod off and then a few more times throughout the night.
  • Deep sleep tends to disappear in the last cycles of the night when REM increases. (Thank goodness because it is difficult to wake from deep sleep, and if someone or something dares do this, you may feel disoriented and irritable).
  • Growth hormone production occurs in deep sleep and both decrease with age.
  • When we lack deep wave sleep, our risk for almost every disease goes up. The research is clear: we need deep wave sleep to be well.
  • Things that zap deep sleep include alcohol, benzodiazepines, opioid medications, lack of activity, and oversleeping (sleeping past your regular wake-up time).

REM vs Deep: The Most Important Type of Sleep (3)

REM sleep is similar to an awake brain.

Source: bruniewska/Shutterstock

REM Sleep

  • REM Sleep is quite different from the other stages because the brain appears awake, but the body stays immobile. It is called paradoxical sleep for this reason.
  • REM brain waves are shorter than delta waves and are not synchronized like deep wave sleep.
  • REM usually occurs later in a 90-minute sleep cycle and commonly just before waking.
  • Dreams commonly occur during REM sleep, but muscles lose all tone, which prevents (most of) us from acting out our dreams.
  • However, blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing quicken, and our eyes dart beneath our eyelids, thus named rapid-eye-movement sleep, regardless of whether we are dreaming.
  • REM sleep is important for learning. It strengthens memories the night after you learn something new, like clicking “Save” for a new document. (Power naps may help this too).
  • REM sleep assists memory differently than deep sleep, focusing on social-emotional memories and even salvaging forgotten memories.
  • REM also helps us make connections our brain wouldn’t even dare try during the day. It is incredibly creative in the connections it attempts beyond what our daytime thinking is capable of.
  • REM is often followed by brief periods of wakefulness, which are normal in a sleep cycle. If you wake briefly several times a night but fall back to sleep, you have not missed any of the good stuff.
  • REM sleep is no longer assumed to be just restorative; it is also preparatory. It stimulates the central nervous system, preparing us to wake up. This is ideal just before your alarm goes off.
  • REM sleep is also very susceptible to the negative effects of alcohol, just like deep sleep. Alcohol and quality sleep do not mix well.

Read about the Rules of Sleep to train your brain to get more deep and sufficient REM each night.

THE BASICS

  • Why Is Sleep Important?
  • Find a sleep therapist near me

References

Del Pozo, J. (August, 2022) Restorative Sleep Workshop: The Art, Science, and Spiritual Practice of Sleep.

Carley, D. W., & Farabi, S. S. (2016). Physiology of Sleep. Diabetes spectrum : a publication of the American Diabetes Association, 29(1), 5–9. https://doi.org/10.2337/diaspect.29.1.5

Peever, J., & Fuller, P. M. (2016). Neuroscience: A Distributed Neural Network Controls REM Sleep. Current biology : CB, 26(1), R34–R35. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2015.11.011

Walker, M. (2017). Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams. Scribner: NY, NY.

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About the Author

Jessica Del Pozo, Ph.D., is a licensed clinical psychologist who works with health care organizations, teaches workshops, and enjoys a small private practice.

More from Jessica Del Pozo, Ph.D.

More from Psychology Today

REM vs Deep: The Most Important Type of Sleep (2024)

FAQs

Is it more important to have deep sleep or REM sleep? ›

The third and fourth stages are deep sleep. Though REM sleep was previously believed to be the most important sleep phase for learning and memory, newer data suggests that non-REM sleep is more important for these tasks, as well as being the more restful and restorative phase of sleep.

Does deep sleep or REM sleep make you feel rested? ›

The third stage of non-REM sleep is the deepest sleep phase—it's the one that makes you feel well rested and energetic the next day. This stage of sleep is also when the body repairs and regrows tissues, builds bone and muscle and strengthens the immune system.

Which comes first deep sleep or REM sleep? ›

Stage 2 NREM sleep accounts for about 45% of your time asleep (the most of any stage). You'll go through multiple rounds of stage 2 NREM sleep, and usually, each one is longer than the last. After stage 2, you move deeper into stage 3 NREM sleep or enter REM sleep.

How many minutes of REM sleep should you get? ›

On average you'll go through 3-5 REM cycles per night, with each episode getting longer as the night progresses. The final one may last roughly an hour. For healthy adults, spending 20-25% of your time asleep in the REM stage is a good goal. If you get 7-8 hours of sleep, around 90 minutes of that should be REM.

Is too much deep sleep bad? ›

Excessive deep sleep can also occur in certain health conditions. However, for most people, the body naturally regulates the amount of deep sleep needed. If you're consistently feeling groggy or feel exhausted upon waking, it could indicate an imbalance in your sleep stages.

How do I get more deep sleep instead of REM sleep? ›

8 tips for deeper sleep
  1. Get moving. Physical activity isn't just good for your heart, it can also ease you into deeper sleep. ...
  2. Fiber up. ...
  3. Hold off on caffeine. ...
  4. Establish a bedtime routine. ...
  5. Tune into white noise. ...
  6. Try relaxation exercises. ...
  7. Keep stress and anxiety in check. ...
  8. Spruce up your sleep space.
Jul 18, 2023

What causes lack of deep sleep? ›

Deep sleep occurs multiple times throughout the sleep period, but factors like insomnia, stress, and aging can affect duration of deep sleep. Get more deep sleep by taking a warm bath, improving your diet, or listening to binaural beats before bed.

How many hours of deep sleep is needed? ›

The amount of sleep we need varies by age, but the CDC recommend at least 7 hours of sleep in every 24 hours for adults. In addition, getting around 1.5–2 hours of deep sleep is crucial for feeling rested and staying healthy.

Can lack of REM sleep cause fatigue? ›

However, there are a few things you can look for if you're worried that you're not getting enough REM sleep — foggy or groggy in the morning, lacking in energy during the day, feeling hungry often or gaining weight, don't feel like exercising, being forgetful,and irritable.

How much deep sleep does a 70 year old need? ›

Women ages 70 and older can still get an adequate amount of stage 3 sleep (15 percent of the night), whereas men of the same age often only achieve a cycle of deep sleep about 5 percent of the night.

Why is my deep sleep so short? ›

Researchers have found that people with a lot of stress not only have difficulty sleeping, but also get less deep sleep. View Source . Calming activities that reduce stress may help people sleep more deeply. Relaxation exercises, deep breathing, yoga, and meditation can naturally reduce anxiety and may improve sleep.

Is 2 hours of REM sleep too much? ›

Rapid eye movement or REM sleep is the fourth out of four total stages of sleep. REM sleep is characterized by relaxed muscles, quick eye movement, irregular breathing, elevated heart rate, and increased brain activity. Most adults need about two hours of REM sleep each night.

How much deep sleep should I get? ›

You should aim for about 13 to 23 percent of your sleep to be in these stages. So, if you get 8 hours of sleep, you should be getting anywhere between an hour and just under two hours of deep sleep. However, it's important to note that what time you go to bed can greatly influence how much deep sleep you get.

What happens if you don't get REM or deep sleep? ›

Getting enough deep sleep helps the brain and body prepare to take on new information and adapt to new environments. Not getting enough deep sleep can cause learning difficulties, make you susceptible to infection, and put you at risk for long-term health concerns.

What is the ideal sleep cycle? ›

An average sleep cycle lasts about 90 minutes. Ideally, you need four to six cycles of sleep every 24 hours to feel fresh and rested. Each cycle contains four individual stages: three that form non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep and one rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.

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