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Redeye flight question
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:12 am
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:12 am
I'm taking a 10 hour flight that should land at 8am local time. I need to be up and running that morning. Do y'all have any recommendations for sleep aides on the plane?
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:13 am to Rex Feral
Business class lay down seat is the best option.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:24 am to VABuckeye
quote:
Business class lay down seat is the best option.
I'm a cheap arse and bought economy.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:25 am to Rex Feral
Did you at least spring for premium economy and the extra legroom? Unless you are short you will be miserable. Sorry to say it.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:32 am to Rex Feral
There isn't much of a secret for sleeping better in a long-haul economy seat. Best I can probably say is melatonin. Otherwise, some people are simply better than others at sleeping on planes. Prepare yourself for some pretty quick sprints in-and-out of sleep.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:47 am to hoopsgalore
My buddy uses this....it is crazy but he leans forward like over the tray and somehow gets decent sleep. He essentially hugs it and puts his face there. It is inflatable.
And I know people will boo hoo this sometimes, but dont drink alcohol...not worth it for sleep or when you land.
Good luck
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:49 am to Rex Feral
quote:
I'm a cheap arse and bought economy.
Window seat will be best. At least you can sort of lean against the side of the plane.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:04 pm to Rex Feral
Fly in a day earlier. Why you guys let your companies do this to you is odd.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:52 pm to FieldEngineer
quote:This also if you get the isle you will be woken up all night for people who need to go to the bathroom. It's better to be the one waking someone up if you have to go instead
Window seat will be best. At least you can sort of lean against the side of the plane.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 1:03 pm to Rex Feral
quote:
I'm taking a 10 hour flight that should land at 8am local time. I need to be up and running that morning. Do y'all have any recommendations for sleep aides on the plane?
This is just a bad idea if you truly need to be up and running. Even on business class, its just not easy to do and I can sleep almost anywhere.
One key for sure is start preparing a night early. The day before be extremely tired and go to bed early so you wake up very early, then get a lot of exercise so that your body and your mind are very tired. Its a hell of a lot easier to sleep somewhere uncomfortable when you are mentally and physically tired.
Also get exercise at the airport by walking around, before you get on the plane.
Definitely you want a window seat so you aren't bothered by others getting up.
If this is a work trip, you really should be arriving a day early if you want to be effective. Use that to talk to your boss or change your schedule around.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 2:52 pm to Rex Feral
Find the seat with the most amount of pitch you can afford. It's not the leg room, for me, that is an issue; it's the inability to recline. That being said, I do keep the area in front of the seat ahead of me empty so no personal item and a carry-on in the overhead bin only.
The week before you leave try, nightly, to adapt more and more to the time where you're going to land, waking up earlier and earlier a little each day.
Comfortable over the ear noice cancelling headphone with white noise help keep my head upright between the seat headrest cradle (when available), a neck pillow and eye mask.
Other than that, a few drinks in the lounge before takeoff, pop a melatonin just before takeoff, wait to eat dinner on the plane and I can normally get a couple hours. Not a full night sleep but enough to function when I land.

The week before you leave try, nightly, to adapt more and more to the time where you're going to land, waking up earlier and earlier a little each day.
Comfortable over the ear noice cancelling headphone with white noise help keep my head upright between the seat headrest cradle (when available), a neck pillow and eye mask.
Other than that, a few drinks in the lounge before takeoff, pop a melatonin just before takeoff, wait to eat dinner on the plane and I can normally get a couple hours. Not a full night sleep but enough to function when I land.

Posted on 8/12/25 at 3:19 pm to Rex Feral
quote:Eat several hours before the flight. Bring blackout eyemask. When you board, inform the staff that you do not want to be bothered for any service of any kind prior to landing - including breakfast. Take 3mg of melatonin, but the eyemask on and attempt to sleep (I would try earplugs also).
I'm taking a 10 hour flight that should land at 8am local time. I need to be up and running that morning. Do y'all have any recommendations for sleep aides on the plane?
Posted on 8/12/25 at 3:19 pm to LSUfan4444
quote:Terrible idea as it ruins sleep quality.
a few drinks in the lounge
Posted on 8/12/25 at 3:22 pm to Big Scrub TX
Perhaps better than some of the cushion options offered, there are a lot of these that work better. It basically is an eyemask that wraps around the seat back, so it holds your head in place:


Posted on 8/12/25 at 3:29 pm to Rex Feral
Really depends what direction you are going, and what time you leave and land. If you are flying south or east, you can sleep as much as you want. If you are flying west, you need to sleep on local time. I just flew DFW-PVG. It was 10am in Dallas and 11pm in Shanghai when we took off.
For an 8am arrival, I assume you are flying to South America, or Western Europe. DFW-GRU is right around 10 hours.
Either way, adjust to the local time as soon as you are on the flight. Avoid alcohol, drink plenty of water the day before and leading up to the flight.
I hate neck pillows, but have a regular pillow that rolls up into a bag when not being used. If I am not in business, I always take a window so I can lean against it. I have a nice sleep mask, and apart from noise cancelling headphones, I bring old fashioned in ear plugs.
Always have a snack or two in your bag.
I use melatonin 30 minutes before I want to try to sleep, and for longer flights, I might take half a dose halfway through the flight.
Last thing - I always put a pair of pajamas in my backpack and change once we are airborne. Being in some nice comfortable pants and a hoodie is 100s better than jeans, a button up, and jacket.
Some people swear by compression socks, I don't bother.
Bonus: Might sound goofy, but I got introduced to this in China, and you slap this bad boy under your sleep mask and it is amazing. Steam Eye Mask
TL;DR - Just stay awake at your destination, drink a coffee, sleep however you can on the plane, and you will be fine.
For an 8am arrival, I assume you are flying to South America, or Western Europe. DFW-GRU is right around 10 hours.
Either way, adjust to the local time as soon as you are on the flight. Avoid alcohol, drink plenty of water the day before and leading up to the flight.
I hate neck pillows, but have a regular pillow that rolls up into a bag when not being used. If I am not in business, I always take a window so I can lean against it. I have a nice sleep mask, and apart from noise cancelling headphones, I bring old fashioned in ear plugs.
Always have a snack or two in your bag.
I use melatonin 30 minutes before I want to try to sleep, and for longer flights, I might take half a dose halfway through the flight.
Last thing - I always put a pair of pajamas in my backpack and change once we are airborne. Being in some nice comfortable pants and a hoodie is 100s better than jeans, a button up, and jacket.
Some people swear by compression socks, I don't bother.
Bonus: Might sound goofy, but I got introduced to this in China, and you slap this bad boy under your sleep mask and it is amazing. Steam Eye Mask
TL;DR - Just stay awake at your destination, drink a coffee, sleep however you can on the plane, and you will be fine.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 4:02 pm to Big Scrub TX
Alcohol does have an initial sedative affect but it does suppress REM sleep which is why I add a delayed release melatonin. Unless you're in business / first, REM sleep is going to be difficult due to numerous factors but two - three cocktails pales in comparison to most of the other factors that affect trying to sleep on a long haul flight.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 4:04 pm to LSUfan4444
quote:Might work for you. I don't think this is true for the median flyer. Alcohol can also just suppress sleep continuity as well, not just REM (and deep, which is what I'm most concerned about).
Alcohol does have an initial sedative affect but it does suppress REM sleep which is why I add a delayed release melatonin. Unless you're in business / first, REM sleep is going to be difficult due to numerous factors but two - three cocktails pales in comparison to most of the other factors that affect trying to sleep on a long haul flight.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 4:49 pm to Rex Feral
Which way are you flying? And when you say hit the ground running do you mean for work, pleasure, physical exertion?
I know people who swear by the app that preps you for several days in advance on avoiding light at certain times, etc.
I recently flew business class to Europe and was able to get six solid hours with war plugs, eye mask, pillow and CPAP. Felt great when I landed. Pretty dang tired by the end of the day.
I know people who swear by the app that preps you for several days in advance on avoiding light at certain times, etc.
I recently flew business class to Europe and was able to get six solid hours with war plugs, eye mask, pillow and CPAP. Felt great when I landed. Pretty dang tired by the end of the day.
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