What sleep science actually says about bedroom color
The research on bedroom color and sleep is less definitive than interior design advice suggests, but the consistent finding is that high-arousal color environments — highly saturated, warm-temperature hues — tend to be associated with lighter, less restful sleep than low-arousal environments. Warm, vivid reds and oranges increase heart rate and physiological arousal; cool, muted blues and greens tend toward the opposite. The mechanism is not fully understood but likely involves both psychological expectation (blue skies signal daytime; dark, muted tones signal night) and direct physiological response to color temperature. A 2013 Travelodge study of 2,000 UK participants found that people with blue bedrooms averaged the most sleep — 7 hours 52 minutes — compared to purple bedroom occupants who averaged the least (5 hours 56 minutes). The effect sizes are meaningful even if the study is not controlled academic research.
