Clinical support
Your guide to sleep diaries for CBT
Here’s how sleep diaries can help your clients achieve better rest.
Worksheets and structured tools are powerful assets in therapy. They offer clients a tangible way to engage with treatment, build insight, and track progress over time. Whether addressing mood, anxiety, or sleep, these tools provide clarity and structure to the therapeutic process. One particularly effective worksheet used in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is the sleep diary. It is a simple yet powerful intervention that gives the client and the therapist valuable insights into sleep habits and patterns.
What is a sleep diary?
The sleep diary is a core part of the CBT-I treatment protocol. CBT-I seeks to improve sleep patterns for clients suffering from a variety of sleep challenges. The treatment includes psychoeducation, cognitive interventions, and behavioral interventions including sleep hygiene practices. The sleep diary is introduced in the initial sessions of CBT-I and gives the client a way to track multiple aspects of their sleep patterns. Clients are asked daily to record the data about their previous night’s sleep. There are various prompts on the worksheet that help clients and their therapist identify unique aspects of their sleep patterns and tailor targeted interventions for those challenges.
Initially, the client tracks their sleep for 1-2 weeks to establish a baseline of their current sleep. Insights from the sleep diary can lay the foundation for change with the client. The sleep diary is used through CBT-I treatment because it sustains client engagement, shows the progress of interventions, and highlights any needed treatment adjustments. As interventions like sleep restriction and stimulus control are applied, the client and therapist can tangibly see the results. Overall, a therapist and their client use a sleep diary to inform treatment plans and interventions used in session.
Sleep diary questions
A typical sleep diary includes the following questions to track sleep patterns:
- What time did you get into bed?
- What time did you try to go to sleep?
- How long did it take you to fall asleep?
- How many times did you wake up, not counting your final awakening?
- In total, how long did these awakenings last?
- What time was your final awakening?
- After your final awakening, how long did you spend in bed trying to sleep?
- Did you wake up earlier than you planned? (Yes/No) If yes, how much earlier?
- What time did you get out of bed for the day?
- In total, how long did you sleep?
- How would you rate the quality of your sleep? (e.g., Very poor, Poor, Fair, Good, Very good)
- How rested or refreshed did you feel when you woke up for the day? (e.g., Not at all rested, Slightly rested, Somewhat rested, Well-rested, Very well-rested)
- How many times did you nap or doze?
- In total, how long did you nap or doze?
- How many drinks containing alcohol did you have?
- What time was your last drink?
- How many caffeinated drinks (coffee, tea, soda, energy drinks) did you have?
- What time was your last caffeinated drink?
- Did you take any over-the-counter or prescription medication(s) to help you sleep? (If yes, list medication(s), dose, and time taken)
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Sleep diary instructions
Clients should fill out the sleep diary daily. It is suggested that they input most of the information in the mornings when they can still remember the details of the previous night. Several key metrics can be identified through sleep tracking. These help establish a baseline of a client’s sleep and monitor progress throughout treatment.
Total time in bed (TIB): This is the period from when a client gets into bed for the evening to when they get out of bed for the day.
Time awake: This is determined by identifying the total time spent between initial bedtime and final time of getting out of bed for the day. This considers wake windows during the middle of the night. Time awake = Sleep onset latency (how long it takes to fall asleep) + total minutes awake during the night + minutes awake after final awakening but before getting out of bed.
Time asleep (TST): This calculates the total amount of time that the client actually was asleep during the night. It subtracts time awake from the total time in bed. Time asleep = total time in bed - time awake.
Sleep efficiency (SE): This calculation takes the time asleep, divides it by the total time in bed, and multiplies it by 100 to determine a percentage of sleep efficiency. SE = (TST/TIB)x100. Generally a sleep efficiency of 85% or higher is considered healthy.
Sleep diary PDFs
This list includes a few different versions of sleep diaries that can be utilized with clients:
- CBTIWeb Sleep Diary: This version, known as the Consensus Sleep Diary, represents an effort to standardize sleep tracking. However, multiple variations are still widely used.
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Sleep Diary
- National Sleep Foundation Sleep Diary
- Therapist Aid Sleep Diary
- Sleepeducation.org Sleep Diary
- Bonus - CBT-I Coach App: This mobile app, developed by the VA, is based on CBT-I principles and includes features such as a digital sleep diary. It is available to download for free on IOS and Android.
Headway’s resources help you better serve your clients
While sleep diaries offer valuable insights into your clients’ patterns, Headway takes care of the behind-the-scenes work that keeps your practice running. From insurance support to scheduling and documentation, Headway’s intuitive platform streamlines your workflow and reduces time spent on administrative tasks. Our network of providers are able to stay more organized and efficient with built-in EHR features, digital form sharing, and secure storage. By lightening the load of paperwork and insurance management, Headway gives you more time to focus on what matters most: providing thoughtful, effective care to your clients.
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice. All decisions should be made at the discretion of the individual or organization, in consultation with qualified clinical, legal, or other appropriate professionals.
© 2025 Therapymatch, Inc. dba Headway. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.
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