11 Ways to Sleep Better With Type 1 Diabetes

Getting a good night’s sleep can be a challenge for people with type 1 diabetes. From navigating blood sugar highs and lows to equipment alarms and device discomfort, there’s plenty that can interfere with quality rest.
Fortunately, there are strategies for addressing the sleep problems that people with type 1 diabetes often face, to help ensure that nights are as restful as possible.
1. Adjust Your CGM Alarm Settings
Pediatric endocrinologist Kristin Arcara, MD, clinical codirector of the division of pediatric endocrinology and diabetes at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore, says that adjusting overnight alarms can help ensure that your sleep is interrupted less frequently: “Some CGM devices allow you to customize settings to make them different for daytime and nighttime.”
It’s important to talk with your healthcare provider about how you customize your alerts for overnight use, she says, so that you can avoid alarm fatigue while remaining aware of blood sugar highs and lows.
2. Snack for Glucose Stability
“If your blood glucose levels are within target range but tend to drop overnight, having a snack that includes a quality carbohydrate and protein can help keep blood glucose levels steady,” says Toby Smithson, RDN, CDCES, senior manager of nutrition and wellness at the American Diabetes Association.
“The snacks that are better suited for bedtime are the things that are better suited for the rest of the day: fiber, protein, healthy fat, and complex carbohydrates, as opposed to high-sugar foods,” says Dr. Arcara.
3. Try New Device Locations
Not every CGM or insulin pump location is equally comfortable. It may sound like common sense, but if your device is uncomfortable overnight, consider putting it in a new location on your body.
“You have to consider how you sleep,” says Arcara. “If you sleep on your right side, don’t put it on your right arm, because it’s going to go off all night.”
Your manufacturer’s instructions will tell you which parts of your body your device can attach to. Some people with diabetes choose to ignore these guidelines and stick their devices to different parts of their body, though this can’t guarantee optimal results.
“Devices are approved for certain sites, but patients certainly go outside of that and use them in different sites,” says Arcara. “It’s important to figure out what works for each patient.” For people who use an insulin pump and a CGM that communicate with one another, it may be helpful to put both devices on the same side of the body, she says.
4. Don’t Overtreat Compression Lows
“If you get an alert for a low in the middle of the night ... and it doesn’t match how you’re feeling, it’s really important to do that finger stick,” says Arcara. “If it’s actually low, treat it, and repeat the finger stick in 15 minutes.” If the finger stick reads normal, go back to sleep.
5. Beware of the ‘Pizza Effect’
Pay attention to how different meals affect you. “Monitor glucose trends with what you eat, to understand which foods or combinations of foods affect your blood glucose levels,” says Smithson.
If you’re using an insulin pump with automated insulin delivery, your system should take care of these blood sugar elevations automatically. Insulin pumps that aren’t connected to a CGM also allow you to preprogram doses of insulin if you know your blood sugar is likely to rise after bedtime.
If you’re not using an insulin pump or are not comfortable trusting those features and you plan to splurge on a richer meal, consider eating it earlier in the day, which could preserve your ability to react to subsequent blood sugar changes.
“The approach might be different based on each person,” says Arcara, noting that some people may decide to avoid certain foods altogether, while others may choose to enjoy them only occasionally.
6. Take a Tech Vacation
For some people, the solution may be simpler. “If you’re feeling like you want a pump break, talk to your provider,” says Arcara. “Maybe a different pump would work better for you. Maybe taking a look at your continuous glucose monitor alerts would work better for you ... it really depends on what it is about the technology that’s causing you stress.”
7. Strategize Your Exercise
“Having [an] idea of what your body does and how your body responds to different activities can help you make a proactive plan to avoid any issues with blood sugar overnight,” says Arcara.
For instance, people on injections may decide to decrease long-acting insulin on nights that they exercise. People using pumps and automated insulin delivery systems will have special settings designed for exercise. “Turning that on while you’re exercising and leaving it on for a few hours afterward might be a way to avoid hypoglycemia overnight as well,” says Arcara.
8. Keep Hypo Snacks Nearby
“The last thing you want to do if your blood sugar is low and your brain is starving for energy is get out of bed and walk downstairs to the kitchen, because that’s not a safe thing to do sometimes,” says Arcara.
9. Fine-Tune Your Basal Dose
Basal insulin is the insulin that your body uses in the background over the course of a day, regardless of whether you’ve eaten a meal, to keep your metabolism running as it should. An insulin pump delivers a constant small trickle of insulin to serve as basal insulin, while those on injections use long-acting insulin that’s formulated to become bioavailable very slowly throughout the day.
Work with your provider if you think you need a change to your overnight basal rates, says Smithson. “It’s trial and error with finding the best basal rate for each person,” she says.
“Depending on the pump system, there are different strategies you can use to ask the pump to be slightly more gentle with your blood sugar overnight,” says Arcara.
10. Switch to an AID System
An automated insulin delivery (AID) system allows your CGM and insulin pump to communicate with one another, with the goal being to keep your blood glucose in your target range, says Smithson. “It takes some of the constant thinking and adjustments of insulin dosing out of the picture, especially overnight when you should be sleeping,” she says.
“Probably the most appealing feature of the automated insulin delivery systems is the overnight blood glucose management,” says Arcara, as they can decrease how often patients have to wake up in the middle of the night to address blood sugar.
11. Do a Safety Check as Part of Your Bedtime Routine
Needing to change an insulin or CGM site in the middle of the night can easily disrupt otherwise healthy sleep.
A quick bedtime check of your status and diabetes equipment can help you avoid unnecessary overnight interruptions. “Have a routine of making sure that everything is in a safe spot for you to have a great night with your diabetes,” says Arcara. Before falling asleep, she suggests checking the following:
- Blood sugar level
- Insulin pump charge or pump battery level
- Insulin pump reservoir
- CGM status and time of expiration
The Takeaway
- Adjust CGM alarms for fewer nighttime interruptions, and place devices on parts of the body that you don’t sleep on, to prevent discomfort and compression lows.
- Stabilize overnight glucose with high-protein, high-fiber bedtime snacks, and be wary of the “pizza effect,” where high-fat meals cause delayed blood sugar spikes long after you’ve fallen asleep.
- Strategize the timing of exercise to avoid delayed hypoglycemia, and work with your doctor to adjust your basal insulin dose or pump settings on days when you’re more active.
- Establish a bedtime safety routine that includes checking all of your diabetes equipment and your blood sugar, and keep fast-acting glucose treatments like juice or tabs right next to your bed in case of an overnight low.
Resources We Trust
- Cleveland Clinic: Exploring the Relationship Between Sleep Amount and Type 1 Diabetes
- Diabetes Spectrum : Type 1 Diabetes and Sleep
- Mayo Clinic: Blood Sugar Testing: Why, When and How
- American Diabetes Association: Insulin Routines
- Weill Cornell Medicine: Type 1 Diabetes: Learning to Manage a Lifelong Condition
- Masini A et al. Sleep Quality and Glycemic Control in Type 1 Diabetes: A Retrospective Cohort Study Using Advanced Technological Devices. Diabetology. March 13, 2025.
- Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM). Cleveland Clinic. May 24, 2024.
- Gökçe T et al. Bedtime Snacking and Glycemic Deterioration in Young Children With Type 1 Diabetes on Multiple Daily Injections: A Randomized Controlled Crossover Trial. Nutrition & Diabetes. November 21, 2025.
- Mongefranco G. CGM Is Reading Low Values at Night: Causes and Solutions. University of Michigan Eisenberg Family Depression Center.
- Treatment of Low Blood Sugar (Hypoglycemia). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. May 15, 2024.
- Managing High Fat and High Protein Meals With Multiple Daily Injections (MDI). National Health Service Cambridge University Hospitals. January 13, 2026.
- Tanenbaum ML et al. Experience With Burdens of Diabetes Device Use that Affect Uptake and Optimal Use in People with Type 1 Diabetes. Endocrine Connections. September 8, 2023.
- Subramanian S et al. The Management of Type 1 Diabetes. Endotext. May 22, 2021.
- Alnawwar MA et al. The Effect of Physical Activity on Sleep Quality and Sleep Disorder: A Systematic Review. Cureus. August 16, 2023.
- Blood Glucose and Exercise. American Diabetes Association.
- Bisno DI et al. 218-OR: Time of Exercise Affects Nocturnal Hypoglycemia After Exercise in Adults With Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) — Results From the T1D Exercise Initiative (T1DEXI) Study. Diabetes. June 25, 2025.
- Hypoglycemia. Mayo Clinic. November 18, 2023.
- Hypoglycemia: Signs, Symptoms, and Treatment for Hypoglycemia (Low Blood Glucose). American Diabetes Association.
- Nauck MA et al. Twenty-Four Hour Fasting (Basal Rate) Tests to Achieve Custom-Tailored, Hour-by-Hour Basal Insulin Infusion Rates in Patients With Type 1 Diabetes Using Insulin Pumps (CSII). Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology. October 21, 2019.
- Kulzer B et al. Nocturnal Hypoglycemia in the Era of Continuous Glucose Monitoring. Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology. August 19, 2024.

Sandy Bassin, MD
Medical Reviewer
Sandy Bassin, MD, is an endocrinology fellow at Mount Sinai in New York City. She is passionate about incorporating lifestyle medicine and plant-based nutrition into endocrinology, particularly for diabetes and obesity management.
She trained at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, where she taught culinary medicine classes to patients and medical trainees. She continued her training at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.
Dr. Bassin has published reviews of nutrition education in medical training and physical activity in type 2 diabetes in Nutrition Reviews, Endocrine Practice, and the American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine. She has been featured on the Physician to Physician Plant-Based Nutrition podcast and given many presentations on lifestyle interventions in endocrine disorders.
She stays active through yoga and gardening, and loves to cook and be outdoors.

Jessica Freeborn
Author
Jessica Freeborn has worked as a health and wellness freelance writer since 2021. She is passionate about encouraging people to take control of their health and stay informed about the latest medical advancements. She has two nursing degrees and has used her healthcare experience to enhance her writing and research.
As someone with type 1 diabetes, she understands the complexities surrounding diabetes management and wants to provide people with accurate information and dispel misconceptions about diabetes treatment.