WASHINGTON — Americans might run on sleep, but those living in the country’s largest cities don’t appear to run on much.
Jawbone, the maker of the popular fitness tracker of the same name, crunched data for tens of thousands of its users in more than 20 of the United States’ largest cities (and several thousand users in more than 20 of the largest cities around the world).
It turns out that New York City doesn’t quite live up to its reputation for night crawling — the city’s dwellers actually go to sleep earlier on average than those of any other in the country, at around 11:15 p.m. And that Las Vegas, rather true to form, boasts the shortest average sleep schedule among American cities, at just over six and a half hours each night. No city around the world, however, sleeps as little as Tokyo — where the average night of sleep spanned just about 5 hours and 45 minutes — or as much as Melbourne, Australia — where the average night of sleep was estimated to be roughly seven hours.
But what’s most interesting is this: every one of the 21 U.S. and 24 international cities included in Jawbone’s survey registered fewer than seven hours of sleep per night on average. Even in Melbourne, the city that sleeps the most, the average was six hours and 58 minutes, just short of the seven hour marker.