TrendPulse Logo

The Best Time to Drink Coffee for Productivity (and When Not To) | WIRED

Source: WiredView Original
technologyMarch 31, 2026

CommentLoader-

Save StorySave this story

CommentLoader-

Save StorySave this story

A coffee-free morning is a form of betrayal. I love the taste and the ritual of coffee, of course. I also review coffee and coffee machines for a living. But caffeine is also, quite simply, a drug. It happens to be the drug I use to motivate myself in the morning.

And yet I know I should not feel strung out on caffeine at 10 am, the way I far too often do. I drink coffee in part to fuel productivity but instead often end up stretched thin. I've cut back significantly on my caffeine dose since my jittery coffee-pot days breaking stories at daily newspapers. I might instead spend ages making a single pinkies-up espresso cup. So why do I still often feel so hollow and shaky from caffeine?

It turns out that getting the most from coffee is not simply a matter of dose. It's also timing. And I'd been doing it wrong.

The best time to drink coffee always feels like five minutes before it's done brewing. But there's also such a thing as drinking your first cup too soon. I learned this after consulting a dietician and a neurologist about caffeine's effects on the brain.

Here's how to get the most productivity and pep out of your morning cup, and how to avoid anxiety and energy crashes.

Wait an Hour in the Morning to Drink Coffee

Caffeine is the original biohack and a shortcut to motivation on a gray morning. It is a stimulant that offers a potent chemical signal to your brain that the day has begun, even when you're not ready for it. By blocking a sleep chemical called adenosine, says Ellen Akkerman, a neurologist at the Virginia Spine Institute outside Washington, DC, “caffeine increases alertness and energy and decreases sleepiness and increases adrenaline.”

So it may seem a bit counterintuitive that you'd want to delay drinking your morning cup, when caffeine gets it off to such a rollicking start. The answer lies in a stress hormone called cortisol, part of the body's fight-or-flight response.

Caffeine causes a spike in cortisol, which helps give your body a surge of energy. But you know what else causes a big spike in cortisol? The mere act of waking up.

“Cortisol naturally rises when you wake, depending on the time that you wake,” says Julia Zumpano, a registered dietitian at Cleveland Clinic Center for Human Nutrition. "It typically peaks around 7 or 8 am and then gradually drops throughout the day.”

If you drink coffee while your natural cortisol levels are at their highest, Akkerman says, your cortisol levels—and therefore your anxiety and jitters—will spike a lot higher. Your energy levels will also crash down harder.

If you instead wait to brew coffee about an hour after your normal wake-up time, you can catch your cortisol levels on the downswing and prop them back up, leading to a more productive morning with fewer wild swings in energy and anxiety.

Maybe take your shower first. Make yourself pretty. Then drink some coffee.

But Also Maybe Don’t Wait an Hour. It Depends

But the above advice assumes you are waking up at a time that feels normal to you. Drinking coffee optimally is not as simple as setting your coffee machine to start brewing at 9 am. (Though the Oxo 12-Cup will totally do this for you.) Some people are natural early risers. Some are late risers. And so you have to pay attention to when your body actually seems to want to wake up.

“If you’re a late riser, that means your natural body alertness is a little bit later,” Akkerman says. Conversely, if you naturally wake up early, your body’s cortisol levels might peak will before 8 am. One way to track your natural circadian rhythms is by using fitness watches or smart rings to track your stress levels.

-

Photograph: Simon Hill

-

Photograph: Simon Hill

-

Photograph: Simon Hill

-

Photograph: Simon Hill

Chevron

Chevron

Save to wishlistSave to wishlist

Oura

Ring 4

$349 Oura

$399 Amazon

$349 Best Buy

$499 Oura (Ceramic)

My editor, Kat Merck, is naturally an early riser, information she was able to back up with hard data from her Oura Ring 4 fitness tracker. Each day beginning after 6 am, her heart rate and other stress indicators start to spike. This happens even when she sleeps in on the weekend—all the way to, like, 7 am.

Oura app via Kat Merck

And so theoretically, 6:30 am is the worst time for her to drink coffee if she wants to avoid cortisol-fueled anxiety. It's also when she drinks coffee.

If you wake up earlier than your natural circadian rhythm, on the other hand, drinking coffee immediately might be the exact right thing to do. “If you have to wake up early for something—a job, whatever it is—but you're a late riser naturally, then it makes sense for you to use caffeine,” Akkerman says. “The sooner, the better.”

If you're a late riser but have to wake up at 6 am for work, you can ride the stimulant effect from coffee into the time of day your body is natur