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The longest anyone has reliably stayed awake is about 11 days, but the effects start within a single day. Here's what happens to your body and brain the longer you go without sleep, and why you can't skip it for long.
6 Min Read | By Jessica Kadel
Last Modified 3 July 2026 First Added 3 January 2018
A bad night here and there is part of life. But what if you just kept going, pushing past one sleepless night into two or three? How long could you actually last, and what would it do to you? The honest answer is that nobody knows the exact limit, because finding out is far too dangerous to test. What we do know is that the effects pile up fast, and they begin within the first day.
The lowdown: There’s no safe limit to how long you can stay awake. The longest reliably recorded case is about 11 days, but the effects start within the first 24 hours, when your judgment is as impaired as if you were drunk. The longer you go, the worse it gets, from microsleeps and memory lapses to hallucinations. Sleep is essential, so this really isn’t one to test.
There’s no firm answer, and that’s partly the point. Scientists can’t ethically run an experiment to find the limit, because going without sleep for long enough is genuinely dangerous. The longest reliably documented case is around 11 days, but most people would struggle badly well before that. What’s clear is that the effects begin within the first 24 hours and get steadily worse the longer you stay awake. Sleep isn’t optional. It’s a basic biological need, as essential as food and water.
Sleep deprivation doesn’t hit all at once. It builds in stages, and each one takes a bigger toll on how you think, feel and function. Here’s roughly how it tends to unfold, though everyone is different, so the timings vary from person to person.
Stay awake for a full day, and you’re already noticeably impaired. After around 24 hours without sleep, your reaction times, judgement and coordination drop to a level similar to a blood alcohol reading of 0.10%, over the drink-drive limit. Even being awake for 17 hours is roughly comparable to a reading of 0.05%. You might feel irritable, foggy and forgetful, with raised stress hormones and blood pressure. It’s a big part of why driving on no sleep is so risky.
By now, the cracks are showing. Microsleeps can start, brief involuntary lapses into sleep that last a few seconds, often without you even noticing, which are especially dangerous behind the wheel. Your memory and concentration take a real hit, and your mood dips. Sleep loss also makes you worse at reading other people’s emotions, so you misjudge faces and social cues, which can leave you snappy or withdrawn.
After two days, your body fights harder to shut down, and microsleeps become more frequent and tougher to resist. Your immune defences weaken, leaving you more prone to illness. This is also when your perception starts to distort. Some people begin to experience illusions or mild hallucinations, sensing things that aren’t quite right.
Push past three days, and the mind struggles to hold on to reality. Hallucinations become more vivid, alongside muddled thinking, paranoia and a strong sense of detachment from yourself or your surroundings, known as depersonalisation. With enough time awake, the symptoms can start to resemble psychosis. This is almost always reversible, though. After a proper sleep, the mind clears.
In a word, yes, sleep really is essential. The reassuring part is that staying awake on purpose has never been shown to cause lasting harm to a healthy person, because the body has a powerful failsafe. Eventually, sleep wins, whether you like it or not. That doesn’t mean you can safely skip sleep, though.
In animal research, going completely without sleep for long enough proved more than the body could withstand, and there’s a very rare inherited condition in humans that makes the same point. It gradually takes away a person’s ability to sleep altogether, with serious effects on health over time. It’s extremely rare, but it’s powerful evidence that we genuinely can’t do without sleep. For most people, the real risk of sleeplessness is indirect, the accidents and mistakes that come from being badly impaired.
The most famous case belongs to Randy Gardner, a 17-year-old from California who stayed awake for 264 hours, about 11 days, in 1964 for a school science fair. He was monitored by Stanford sleep researcher Dr William Dement, and by the end, he was dealing with mood swings, memory lapses, paranoia and hallucinations, though he recovered after a long sleep. His record was later broken, but you won’t find an official title for it any more. Guinness World Records stopped recognising sleep deprivation attempts because the risks are simply too great. That decision tells you most of what you need to know about how far you should push it.
Rather than seeing how long you can last without sleep, it’s far more useful to know how much you actually need. Most adults do best on seven to nine hours a night, with seven hours the minimum health experts recommend for adults. In reality, plenty of us fall short. Our 2026 Sleep Survey found that 53% of UK adults get less than the recommended amount. For help finding your own number, see our guide to how many hours of sleep you need.
If you’ve had a run of short nights, you don’t have to pay every lost hour back one for one. A couple of solid nights go a long way towards restoring you. To get back on track, keep a consistent sleep and wake time, wind down properly before bed and go easy on caffeine and late screens. A dark, cool, quiet room and a comfortable mattress help, too. Our guides to ways to sleep better at night and overcoming sleep deprivation have plenty more.
Not sure when to go to bed? Tell us when you need to wake up, and we’ll suggest the best times to turn in, so you wake at the end of a sleep cycle feeling more refreshed. Try the Sleep Cycle Calculator.
See all articles by Jessica Kadel
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