Anyone who has flown across more than three time zones knows the feeling. You arrive at your destination and even though you slept on the plane (or tried to), your body feels like it belongs in a different time entirely. You are awake at 3 AM local time, exhausted at 3 PM, and hungry at all the wrong hours. This is jet lag, and it is one of the few universal experiences of modern air travel.
The physiology behind jet lag is specific and well-understood. So are the strategies that actually help and the ones that don't. This is what is actually happening inside your body when you fly east or west across multiple time zones, and what you can do about it.
What is actually happening
Your body runs on an internal clock called the circadian rhythm. It is not a loose metaphor. It is a specific biological system governed primarily by a group of cells in the hypothalamus called the suprachiasmatic nucleus. These cells keep time through a cyclical pattern of gene expression that takes almost exactly 24 hours to complete.
Almost every cell in your body has its own version of this clock, and they are all synchronized by signals from the central clock in your brain. The result is a daily rhythm of hormones, body temperature, hunger signals, alertness, and hundreds of other processes that all run on the same 24-hour cycle.
The primary external signal that keeps your central clock in sync is light exposure, especially in the morning. Secondary signals include meal timing, physical activity, and social cues. These inputs tell your circadian system what the external day-night cycle looks like, and your internal clock adjusts to match.
When you fly rapidly across time zones, the light signals, meal times, and social cues at your destination are radically different from what your internal clock is expecting. Your clock has to reset, and that takes time. The symptoms of jet lag are the symptoms of your body running on a time zone that no longer matches where you are.
Why east is worse than west
A surprising and well-established finding is that eastward travel produces more severe jet lag than westward travel, on average. The asymmetry is consistent across studies and across individuals.
The reason has to do with the natural length of the human circadian cycle. The average human circadian rhythm, when isolated from external time cues, runs slightly longer than 24 hours. Different studies have found different exact numbers, but the range is typically 24.1 to 24.5 hours. This means your internal clock naturally wants to drift later each day, and it takes specific light and social cues to keep it anchored to a 24-hour solar day.
Westward travel extends your day. You wake up on the east coast, fly west, and arrive in a time zone where the local time is earlier than your internal clock thinks it is. Your body is happy to stay up later than usual, because that aligns with its natural tendency to drift late.
Eastward travel compresses your day. You fly east and arrive in a time zone where the local time is later than your internal clock thinks it is. Your body has to fall asleep earlier than it wants to, which fights against its natural tendency.
The practical consequence is that recovery from eastward jet lag typically takes about a day per time zone, while westward recovery takes about 80 percent of that. A seven-time-zone eastward trip takes most people about a week to fully recover from. The same trip in the other direction takes closer to five days.
Why it gets worse with age
Jet lag is not worse for younger people across the board, but the ability to recover from it does decline with age. Older adults have more rigid circadian systems, which is why they typically wake up at consistent times, have more trouble sleeping in, and have harder time adjusting to shift work.
The same rigidity makes jet lag recovery slower. A 25-year-old can often reset after a transatlantic flight within a couple of days. A 65-year-old typically takes four or five. This is not about fitness or general health. It is a specific consequence of how the aging brain handles circadian adjustment.
Strategies that actually work
The research on jet lag mitigation is extensive, and some strategies have solid evidence behind them. Others are popular but have little to no effect.
Adjusting your schedule before departure. If you know you are flying east and your destination is three hours ahead, start shifting your bedtime and wake time earlier by 30 to 60 minutes per day for three or four days before the flight. This gives your circadian clock a head start and reduces the amount of adjustment that has to happen during the trip itself.
Light exposure at the right times. Light in the morning advances your circadian clock (makes you fall asleep earlier the next night). Light in the evening delays it (makes you stay up later). The right strategy depends on which direction you are flying. For eastward travel, get morning sun at your destination. For westward, get afternoon and early evening sun. A cheap light therapy lamp can help if natural sun is not available.
Melatonin at the right dose and time. Melatonin is a hormone your brain produces naturally as part of the sleep signal. Taking it at the right time can shift your circadian clock. The effective dose is typically 0.3 to 1 milligram, which is much less than the 3 to 10 milligram doses that are widely sold over the counter. High doses are not more effective and can actually cause next-day grogginess. Timing is more important than dose: take it a few hours before your target bedtime in the new time zone.
Meal timing. Eating meals on the destination's schedule helps peripheral circadian clocks (the ones in your liver, kidneys, and other organs) adjust. This is a secondary effect compared to light exposure, but it contributes.
Hydration and avoiding alcohol. Long flights are dehydrating, and dehydration makes every aspect of jet lag worse. Alcohol compounds dehydration and disrupts sleep quality even when it makes you fall asleep faster. The conventional advice to drink a lot of water and skip the alcohol is actually correct.
Caffeine timing. Caffeine can help maintain alertness during the first day or two after arrival, but it has a long half-life (typically 5 to 6 hours) and can interfere with sleep if consumed in the afternoon or evening. Use it in the morning and stop by early afternoon local time.
Strategies that don't really work
Eating specific "anti-jet lag" foods. The various protein-loading and fasting protocols that have been marketed as jet lag cures have not held up in controlled studies. They may produce placebo effects but no reliable physiological benefit.
Over-the-counter supplements beyond melatonin. Most supplements marketed for jet lag have no evidence of efficacy. Valerian, kava, and various herbal blends produce mild sedation but do not address the underlying circadian mismatch.
Sleeping as much as possible during the flight. Sleep on the plane can help reduce total sleep debt, but if you sleep at the wrong time, it can actually delay circadian adjustment. If your destination is far ahead of your origin, sleeping on a night flight helps. If you are flying during your destination's day, you are better off staying awake and sleeping at the appropriate local nighttime.
Adjusting slowly over many days. There is some research suggesting that rapid adjustment to the new time zone on the day of arrival is more effective than gradual adjustment. Get onto the new schedule as quickly as possible rather than splitting the difference.
The practical approach
For a flight across three to five time zones, the following approach has the best evidence:
1. Start shifting your bedtime in the direction of your destination for three to four days before the flight.
2. Stay hydrated on the flight and avoid alcohol.
3. On arrival, immediately adopt the local schedule for meals and sleep.
4. Get outside in natural light at the right times based on the direction of travel.
5. Consider a small dose of melatonin (0.3 to 1 mg) a few hours before your target local bedtime for the first two or three nights.
6. Avoid caffeine after early afternoon local time.
7. Expect to feel somewhat off for roughly one day per time zone for eastward travel, less for westward.
Jet lag is not going to disappear. It is a consequence of human biology that evolved for a world without transcontinental flight. But the strategies to reduce it are specific and backed by evidence, and they are worth doing if you travel across time zones regularly.
The body's circadian system is remarkable in how tightly it regulates daily physiology. When you fly across eight time zones in ten hours, you are asking that system to adjust to something it was not designed for. Give it time, work with its natural tendencies, and the recovery is measurable and predictable.