Coffee Half Life Calculator: Caffeine in Your System

☕ Coffee Half Life Calculator

Find out how much caffeine remains in your system and when it is safe to sleep

Quick Presets
🧮 Calculator
Caffeine Remaining
--
mg in system
% Remaining
--
of original dose
Hours to Sleep-Safe
--
until below 25 mg
Suggested Bedtime
--
sleep-safe time
Caffeine Content by Drink
95 mg
Drip Coffee 8oz
63 mg
Espresso 1 shot
155 mg
Cold Brew 8oz
47 mg
Green Tea 8oz
📊 Caffeine Content Reference Table
BeverageServingCaffeine (mg)Notes
Drip / Filter Coffee8 fl oz95 mgStandard brewed
Espresso1 shot (1 oz)63 mgConcentrated
Double Espresso2 shots (2 oz)126 mgCommon latte base
Cold Brew Coffee8 fl oz155 mgHigher extraction
Instant Coffee8 fl oz62 mgLower than drip
Green Tea8 fl oz47 mgL-theanine softens effect
Black Tea8 fl oz47 mgSimilar to green tea
Energy Drink (8oz)8 fl oz80 mgCheck label — varies
Energy Drink (16oz)16 fl oz160 mgFull can
Decaf Coffee8 fl oz7 mgNot truly caffeine-free
Half Life by Metabolism Type
MetabolismHalf Life50% ClearedTo Sleep-Safe (<25mg from 200mg)
Fast (CYP1A2 fast)4 hours4 hours~12 hours
Normal (average)5 hours5 hours~15 hours
Slow (CYP1A2 slow)6 hours6 hours~18 hours
Pregnancy9+ hours9+ hours~27+ hours
Liver conditionsUp to 96 hrsVariesConsult a doctor
📅 Hours to Caffeine Clearance (from single dose)
Hours ElapsedFast (4hr HL)Normal (5hr HL)Slow (6hr HL)
2 hours71% remains76% remains79% remains
4 hours50% remains57% remains63% remains
6 hours35% remains43% remains50% remains
8 hours25% remains33% remains40% remains
10 hours18% remains25% remains31% remains
12 hours13% remains19% remains25% remains
16 hours6% remains11% remains16% remains
20 hours3% remains6% remains10% remains
☕ Tip: The caffeine half-life varies significantly between people. Genetics (specifically the CYP1A2 enzyme gene) plays a major role — slow metabolizers can take up to 50% longer to clear caffeine from their system. If you notice coffee disrupting your sleep even when consumed in the morning, you may be a slow metabolizer.
😴 Sleep Tip: Aim to have less than 25 mg of caffeine in your system at bedtime for sleep-safe levels. For most people, this means stopping caffeine intake 8–10 hours before bed. Cold brew and energy drinks pack 1.5–2x more caffeine than regular drip coffee, so adjust your cut-off time accordingly.

Coffee is a drink made from roasted and ground coffee beans. It has a black color, bitter taste and a bit of acid. The stimulating effect of coffee comes mostly from the caffeine, although decaffeinated versions also exist For those that want something different, many coffee substitutes are available.

Botanically coffee has only two main kinds: arabica and robusta. The robusta has more caffeine and commonly has a rubbery, bitter taste.

Coffee Basics

The serving sizes of coffee can confuse. The industry standard for a cup is six ounces, but people usually want at least sixteen ounces. Typical cups are small at eight ounces, medium at twelve ounces and big at sixteen ounces, according to local custom and kinds of drinks.

One cup from a coffee maker is usually five ounces. Makers define a cup as five to six ounces, so that they can advertise more cups for one brew. A machine with a sixty-ounce water tank can promise ten cups, instead of only seven and a half according to the standard eight-ounce cup.

One galon of coffee serves about sixteen eight-ounce cups, so it serves big groups well.

Adding more coffee for a stronger drink seems like a good idea during sleepy mornings. More ground coffee may bring out more taste, but not necessarily more caffeine, and the result is often a too bitter drink.

Instant coffee powder is made of dehydrated crystals soluble in water. Just add water, best hot, but not boiling; to get a fast cup. It is cheaper and easier than whole beans or pods, but the bad fame of instant coffee comes from its taste.

Coffee liqueurs like Kahlúa mix well with ice, milk, cream or almond milk. They work as after-dinner or evening drinks. The caffeine in those liqueurs is almost nothing.

Brewing methods for coffee are many. The French press is popular for home users. Pour-over styles like Melitta and Chemex also have fans.

Some like electric moka pots more than the classical stovetop version, because of better taste and safety. Quality of beans and water matters more than other things for a good result. Good beans going in give good coffee coming out.

Middle East style coffee and coffee with a cloth filter both are true arts. The ground coffee is first only a bit wet, so that it swells before you continue.

Coffee is used in baking too. Used coffee grounds mix into sourdough bread, and there are recipes with coffee and spices like mint, cocoa and cinnamon for a delicious mix.

Coffee Half Life Calculator: Caffeine in Your System

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