Caffeine & Sleep
Drinks & energy

Can I Drink Matcha Before Bed? The Honest Answer

Matcha has ~70 mg of caffeine — about as much as coffee. L-theanine smooths the buzz but won't save your sleep. Here's the latest safe time to drink it.

By Vadim Semenko
Built the caffeine half-life engine · 6 min read · Updated 2026-06-03

Drinking matcha right before bed is not a good idea. A cup carries about 70 mg of caffeine — close to a coffee and more than double steeped green tea — and it clears on the same slow curve. The L-theanine in matcha makes the energy feel calmer, but research shows it does not cancel caffeine's effect on sleep. For a 10–11 PM bedtime, finish your matcha by around 4–5 PM.

How much caffeine is actually in matcha?

Because matcha is powdered whole leaf that you whisk and drink — not leaves you steep and discard — you consume more caffeine than a normal cup of green tea. Drawing on USDA caffeine data for tea, a standard serving (about 1 tsp, ~2 g of powder) lands near 70 mg, with a realistic range of ~38–88 mg depending on grade, amount of powder, and water.

DrinkTypical servingCaffeine
Matcha~2 g powder, 8 oz~70 mg
Brewed coffee8 oz~95 mg
Steeped green tea8 oz~28 mg
Black tea8 oz~47 mg

So matcha sits between green tea and coffee — closer to coffee than most people assume. Treat your evening matcha the way you'd treat an evening coffee, not a harmless herbal tea. (See the full breakdown for caffeine in matcha and how it compares to green tea.)

The L-theanine nuance — what it does and doesn't do

Matcha is rich in L-theanine, an amino acid (roughly 14 mg per gram of powder, so ~25–50 mg per cup). L-theanine promotes a relaxed-but-alert state and takes the jittery edge off caffeine. That's why a matcha buzz often feels smoother than a coffee buzz.

Here's the part people get wrong: smoother is not the same as shorter, and calmer is not the same as sleep-safe.

A 2024 randomized, placebo-controlled trial measured sleep with EEG after four weeks of daily matcha (containing ~71 mg caffeine and ~50 mg theanine). The result: matcha did not significantly change total sleep time, sleep latency, wake-after-sleep-onset, or sleep efficiency — but it also did not protect sleep from the caffeine it contained. The takeaway is straightforward: L-theanine smooths the experience, it does not neutralize the stimulant. The caffeine in a late matcha can still delay and lighten your sleep — it just won't feel as wired while it does.

When does matcha clear your system?

A 70 mg matcha is a real dose to budget around — the FDA's 400 mg-a-day ceiling for healthy adults is about five of them. And caffeine leaves slowly: with an average half-life of about 5 hours, the amount in your body roughly halves every 5 hours, while most people sleep best with under ~50 mg on board at bedtime.

A 70 mg matcha starts above that threshold, so it needs about 2.5 hours just to drop below 50 mg — and several more to clear. Here's what's left at bedtime from a matcha finished at 4 PM:

BedtimeHours after 4 PMCaffeine remaining
8 PM4h~40 mg
9 PM5h~35 mg
10 PM6h~31 mg
11 PM7h~27 mg

A 4 PM matcha lands comfortably under the threshold for a normal bedtime. Push it to 8 or 9 PM, though, and you're still carrying 40–50 mg into the pillow — enough to fragment deep sleep even if you fall asleep fine.

👉 These are averages. To see what your matcha leaves at your bedtime, try the calculator.

What's the latest safe time for matcha?

A simple rule: give a 70 mg matcha about 6 hours before bed so it falls near or below the threshold.

BedtimeLast-call for matcha
9:00 PM~3:00 PM
10:00 PM~4:00 PM
11:00 PM~5:00 PM
12:00 AM~6:00 PM

If you're a slow caffeine metabolizer — caffeine "hits hard" or lingers for you — shift these even earlier, because your personal half-life may run 7–9 hours instead of 5. For an exact, dialed-in cutoff, see coffee cutoff time by bedtime; the same logic applies to matcha.

Better evening swaps

If you want the warm-cup ritual after your cutoff:

  • Decaf green tea — a few mg of caffeine, same grassy comfort.
  • Rooibos — naturally caffeine-free, mildly sweet.
  • Chamomile or other herbal blends — zero caffeine, calming bedtime ritual.
  • A smaller, earlier matcha — half a serving moved to early afternoon clears long before bed.

The bottom line

Matcha is a real caffeinated drink — about 70 mg per cup — and L-theanine softens the buzz but won't save your sleep. Enjoy it in the morning or early afternoon, set a cutoff around 6 hours before bed, and switch to something caffeine-free in the evening. The only way to know your exact safe time is to run your own drinks against your own bedtime.


Track it automatically. The Caffeine & Sleep app logs every matcha, coffee, or energy drink in one tap, models your personal caffeine curve, and pings you before your last safe cup — so you never have to guess whether that evening matcha will cost you sleep. Get the app →

Try it for your bedtime
Drink
You drink it at
Bedtime
Coffee · 95 mg · assuming an average ~5 h half-life
At bedtime
31 mg
should be fine
Latest safe Coffee: 6:22 PM

Frequently asked

Not within a few hours of sleep. A cup of matcha has about 70 mg of caffeine — similar to coffee. With a 5-hour half-life it takes roughly 2.5 hours just to fall below the ~50 mg level that disrupts sleep, and longer to clear fully. For a 10–11 PM bedtime, aim to finish matcha by about 4–5 PM.

No. L-theanine smooths the jittery edge and may make the energy feel calmer, but a randomized trial found it does not cancel caffeine's effect on sleep. The caffeine still delays and lightens your sleep — L-theanine just hides the buzz.

A cup of matcha is roughly 70 mg (range ~38–88 mg), versus about 95 mg for a standard 8 oz brewed coffee. Matcha is lower than a big coffee but far higher than steeped green tea (~28 mg).

Slightly, because the typical dose is a bit lower and the L-theanine makes the stimulation feel gentler. But caffeine is caffeine — an evening matcha still keeps you above the sleep threshold just like an evening coffee would.

Decaf green tea, rooibos, or an herbal blend like chamomile give you the warm-cup ritual with little to no caffeine, so they won't push you over the bedtime threshold.

Sources

  1. USDA FoodData Central — caffeine content of tea and matcha
  2. FDA — Spilling the Beans: How Much Caffeine is Too Much? (400 mg/day guidance)
  3. Unno K. et al., 2024, Nutrients (PMC11397442) — Matcha Does Not Affect Electroencephalography during Sleep but May Enhance Mental Well-Being: A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial
  4. Drake C. et al., 2013, J Clin Sleep Med — caffeine taken close to bed disrupts sleep

Educational content, not medical advice. For concerns about caffeine, sleep, pregnancy or a health condition, talk to a qualified clinician.

Track your caffeine. Sleep better.

The app does this live all day — one-tap logging, widgets, and a 30-minute pre-cutoff reminder. Free, no ads.

Keep reading

Get the App — it’s free