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    What Is a Good Sleep Score? Average Ranges Explained

    By Sonar May 7, 2026

    A good sleep score is generally considered 80 or higher on most wearable devices like an Apple Watch, Oura Ring or Garmin. Scores between 70–79 are usually considered fair, while scores below 60 may indicate poor sleep quality, elevated stress or insufficient recovery.

    What Is a Good Sleep Score? Average Ranges Explained

    This guide breaks down sleep score benchmarks across major devices in 2026, what drives those numbers and how to use this data to actually feel more rested.


    How Sleep Scores Work


    A sleep score is a single numerical value, typically on a scale of 0 to 100, that summarizes the quality of your night's rest. Instead of forcing you to interpret raw biological data, your device condenses multiple metrics into one "grade."


    Most platforms calculate this score using a combination of:


    • Duration: Did you meet your physiological sleep needs?

    • Sleep Stages: The ratio of Light, Deep, and REM sleep.

    • Sleep Efficiency: How much time in bed was spent actually sleeping vs. awake.

    • Restorative Sleep: A combination of Deep Sleep and REM Sleep.

    • Consistency: How closely your sleep/wake times align with your 14-day average.

    What Is Considered a "Good" Sleep Score?


    Most wearable users average a sleep score between 72 and 83 depending on age, stress, training load and sleep consistency. While formulas vary by brand, here is the standard breakdown for what constitutes a "good" score on the most popular wearables:


    Score RangeRatingWhat It Means
    90–100ExcellentPeak recovery; optimal sleep architecture.
    80–89GoodSolid rest; most healthy adults should aim here.
    70–79FairFunctional, but likely feeling some midday fatigue.
    60–69PoorSignificant sleep debt or high physiological stress.
    Below 60Very PoorLifestyle or recovery habits may be severely affecting sleep quality.

    Device-Specific Benchmarks


    • Fitbit: Considers 80+ to be "Good." Most users average between 72 and 83.

    • Oura Ring: Defines 85+ as "Optimal" and 0–59 as "Pay Attention." It places heavy weight on your body temperature and HRV.

    • Apple Watch & Apple Health: Apple provides a native Sleep Score. A score of 81–95 is considered "High," while 61–80 is classified as "OK." 96+ is "Very High" and 0–40 "Very Low."

    • Samsung Galaxy Watch: Uses a 0–100 scale but is more rigorous; 80 or higher is excellent, though most adults average in the low 70s.

    • Garmin: Scores of 80+ are the target, factoring in your body's battery and stress levels.

    What Lowers Your Sleep Score?


    You can spend nine hours in bed and still get a "Poor" score. This is usually due to poor sleep quality caused by:


    • Alcohol: Even one drink may fragment REM sleep and keep your heart rate elevated.

    • Late-Night Meals: Digestion raises your core body temperature, which delays the onset of Deep sleep.

    • High Cortisol: Stress keeps your nervous system in a "sympathetic" (fight or flight) state, lowering your HRV.

    • Temperature: A room warmer than 65°F may contribute to restlessness and reduced restorative sleep. The Sleep Foundation recommends keeping bedroom temperatures between 65°F and 68°F for optimal sleep.

    How to Improve Your Sleep Score


    To move your score into the 80s or 90s, focus on these three high-leverage habits:


    • Anchor Your Circadian Rhythm: Wake up at the same time every day, even on weekends. Your body's internal clock craves predictability.

    • Morning Sunlight: View natural light within 30 minutes of waking. Morning sunlight helps regulate circadian rhythms and supports natural melatonin timing later in the evening.

    • The 3-2-1 Rule: Finish eating 3 hours before bed, stop work 2 hours before bed, and turn off screens 1 hour before bed.

    Beyond the Nightly Number


    A sleep score is a useful snapshot, but it doesn't always explain why your recovery changes from night to night. Factors like stress, exercise timing, alcohol, caffeine and sleep consistency can all influence your results.


    Apps like Sonar help connect your health and performance data in one place so you can spot correlations that may be affecting your sleep and recovery over time.


    FAQ: Common Sleep Score Questions


    Is a sleep score of 75 good?


    A 75 is considered Fair. It means you are functioning, but there is clear room for improvement in either duration or sleep depth.


    Why is my score low even when I sleep 8 hours?


    Duration is only one piece of the puzzle. A low score despite long duration usually points to high heart rate or fragmentation (waking up multiple times), often caused by caffeine, alcohol or stress.


    Can I trust my wearable's sleep data?


    Wearable sleep trackers are generally more useful for tracking long-term trends than diagnosing medical sleep conditions. Use the score as a compass to see if your habits are trending in the right direction.


    About Sonar

    Sonar unifies activity, sleep and nutrition data from all of your favorite wearables and health apps, transforming it into deeply personalized guidance for boosting your daily performance, healthspan and longevity. Whether you’re a seasoned athlete or in the early stages of your health journey, Sonar is for everyone and is trusted by tens of thousands of users in over 165 countries. Launched out of Columbia University in New York, and built in partnership with doctors from Johns Hopkins and UC San Diego, Sonar merges the latest medical, sports and data science to help you train smarter, recover faster, sleep deeper, eat healthier and push yourself to new limits.

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