Sleep Better Tonight: 5 Foods That Help You Rest
Sleep is your body’s and mind’s ultimate reset button. And yet one in three of us wrestle with insomnia or poor sleep quality.
The good news? Some foods can help to ensure that you sleep more soundly thanks to their ability to affect brain chemistry, help regulate hormones and reduce your stress.
Here’s the deal: If five of you share the best scientifically-supported sleep-friendly foods, we can all sleep a little bit easier tonight.
Ready to snooze like a pro? Let’s dive in.
Why Should You Care About Sleep-Enhancing Foods?
Sleep is about more than just resting — it’s about getting better, healing, and laying the groundwork to be your best the next day.
What you eat before bed counts. Here are five foods that will help you to sleep better naturally rather than depending on medication.
But first up, let’s start with some tart cherry juice, a natural sleep aid.
1. Tart Cherry Juice
Tart cherry juice is the new time-honored remedy that’s left over after you drink a glassful of it every night.
It’s full of melatonin and antioxidants (promoting restful life and helping to fight inflammation). Think of it as being tucked in by nature.
Why It Helps
Tart cherries contain a whole bunch of melatonin, the hormone that tells your brain you’re ready to pass out. They are also rich in antioxidants that battle inflammation, which is exactly what you’d want post-recovery.
Research Highlights
Tart cherry juice is proven to increase total sleep time and improve sleep efficiency in meta-analyses across multiple studies. Subjects got more sleep and woke up less frequently.
Additional Benefits
This juice doesn’t just help you sleep — it eases exercise-induced inflammation and muscle soreness. For faster recovery, it is sworn by athletes.
How to Use It
Have a glass of tart cherry juice an hour before bed. Search for unsweetened variations to steer clear of added sugar. Simple, right?
The tangy flavor is a grower not a shower. In addition, knowing it’s helping you sleep makes every sip seem like a reward.
2. Kiwi
Kiwis are small but fierce when it comes to sleep. They’re chock-full of serotonin, vitamin C, vitamin E, folate and fiber — all of which make for better sleep.
Why It Helps
Serotonin, which is known to keep sleep in check, gets a boost from kiwis. The high levels of antioxidants may have a combating effect on brain oxidative stress, and fiber promotes gut health, connecting diet and sleep regulation.
Research Highlights
Research has indicated that eating two kiwifruit one hour before sleep can increase total sleep time by 16.9%, increase sleep efficiency by 2.4%, and decrease sleep onset latency by 28.9% in four weeks.
Fun Fact
The gut, not the brain, produces 70 percent of the body’s serotonin. And that means what you eat affects how well you sleep.
My Take
Cut two kiwifruits and eat them as a pre-bed snack. You can whir them into a smoothie if you want.
Kiwi is the candy of fruits — it seems indulgent, but it is not. It is like dessert that helps you sleep.
3. Milk and Fermented Dairy Products
With some justification, milk before bed isn’t just an old wives’ tale; it’s backed by science.
Tryptophan and bioactive peptides from dairy products also stimulate the production of sleep-friendly serotonin and GABA neurotransmitters.
Why It Helps
Tryptophan turns into serotonin and then melatonin, the hormone that helps sleep regulate itself.
They contain calcium, which is found in milk, and which adds value to that path of tryptophan that occurs in your brain.
Research Highlights
Milk and fermented dairy products may play a role in sleep quality and duration. Research shows that they have a soothing relaxing effect on your nervous system.
Additional Info
Fermented dairy products such as yogurt, and kefir, contribute beneficial probiotics to the mix, supporting gut health and promoting sleep even further through the gut-brain axis.
How to Enjoy It
Heat up a cup of milk and add a pinch of cinnamon or a dollop of honey for additional comfort. Or a cup of Greek yogurt with a drizzle of honey.
Milk’s velvety warmth is a hug in a mug. It’s soothing and nostalgic.
4. Walnuts
Walnuts aren’t just a delicious snack — they are a natural source of melatonin and healthy fats that can help you both fall asleep faster and sleep longer.
Why It Helps
Walnuts exert their action on the CNS through GABAergic and Serotonergic ways. They extend the length of sleep and the time of falling asleep, so people who need sleep aid drugs can also choose them.
Research Highlights
Research has found that walnuts may help improve both the quality and duration of sleep, particularly in people who have insomnia. They work and have fewer side effects than pills.
Fun Fact
One third of people have insomnia across the world and walnuts are a food that helps you.”
Easy Recipe
A pre-bed snack of two handfuls of walnuts. The servings are small, so pair them with a piece of fruit for a balanced snack.
The walnuts add a satisfying crunch. The fact that you’re helping yourself sleep while you eat them makes them even tastier.
5. Leafy Greens
Leafy greens like spinach and lettuce are also loaded with magnesium, calcium and GABA, all of which calm your nervous system and help you doze off.
Why It Helps
Low magnesium is associated with higher stress and bad sleep. These foods help to counter this by delivering nutrients that soothe your body and mind.
Research Highlights
Research on lettuce and magnesium-rich foods suggests it makes you sleep better, too, reducing anxiety and improving sleep quality.
Fun Fact
75% of adults worldwide have low magnesium intake. Adding more leafy greens to your diet can help narrow that chasm.
How to Use Them
Toss a few handfuls of spinach into your dinner salad or sauté some greens to have on the side. Sorrel soup is also a traditional sleep remedy.
A grounded, earthy flavor There is something grounding about greens. It’s like eating peace, in a bowl.
Summary Table
Here is a quick rundown of the foods we’ve covered:
| Food Item | Key Sleep Nutrients | Sleep Benefits | Research Highlights | Additional Facts |
| Tart Cherry Juice | Melatonin, antioxidants | Increases total sleep time, sleep efficiency | Meta-analyses of 8 RCTs, improved actigraphy data | Reduces inflammation, aids recovery |
| Kiwi | Serotonin, vitamin C, fiber | Increases sleep time by 16.9%, reduces latency | Clinical trials with 24–67 subjects, 4-week duration | Supports gut-brain axis, antioxidant-rich |
| Milk & Fermented Dairy | Tryptophan, calcium, bioactive peptides | Improves sleep duration and quality | Evidence from multiple reviews | Calcium aids melatonin production |
| Walnuts | Melatonin, unsaturated fats | Prolongs sleep, reduces latency | Acts via GABAergic and serotonergic systems | Natural alternative to sleep medications |
| Leafy Greens | Magnesium, calcium, GABA | Relaxes nervous system, reduces anxiety | Studies on lettuce and magnesium deficiency | 75% adults have insufficient magnesium intake |
Additional Insights
So let’s unpack why this food combination is so satisfying. Here’s what you need to know:
Avoid Stimulants
By eliminating caffeine and sugary processed foods after late afternoon and evening, you’ll improve sleep onset and quality. Timing matters.
Fiber and Fats Matter
Fiber- and tryptophan- and unsaturated fatty acid-rich foods are associated with improved sleep quality. The way you eat can affect the way you sleep.
Antioxidants Fight Stress
Sleep restriction enhances oxidative stress in the brain. Foods high in antioxidants, such as kiwi and tart cherries, can help with this.
Gut-Sleep Connection
The gut microbiota is involved in sleep regulation. Microbiota diversity and neurotransmitter production is further increased through the inclusion of dietary fiber.
Final Thoughts
These five foods can help you sleep naturally. They’re simple to add to your routine and supported by science.
Obey one tonight and the morning after, you may just rise bright-eyed and ready to take on the day.

I’m Kai, a fitness fiend and wellness geek from Vancouver. I love helping people find small, sustainable ways to feel better every day. From workouts, to good mental health, to smoothie recipes, I keep it real. Perfection is not my thing — progress is. When I’m not at the gym, I’m likely to be hiking or sampling a new meditation app
