No Evidence for Seasonal Variations in Fatigue, Sleepiness, and Insomnia Symptoms: Spring Fatigue is a Cultural Phenomenon rather than a Seasonal Syndrome
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Although not as prominent as in other animals, also humans experience seasonal variations in for example sleep duration and circadian processes. These variations are likely primarily driven by changes in photoperiod length. Anecdotally, a relevant number of people report experiencing fatigue and low energy levels particularly during spring – at least in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria. Thus, this phenomenon is commonly referred to as “spring fatigue”. However, scientific evidence for such a seasonal syndrome is largely missing.
We thus investigated temporal variations in fatigue, daytime sleepiness, insomnia symptoms, and sleep quality through an online survey including repeated (i.e., every six weeks) assessments of the same individuals over the course of one year. We hypothesised that fatigue and daytime sleepiness would be higher during shorter photoperiods. We further expected lower sleep quality and more severe insomnia symptoms under shorter photoperiods. Additionally, we explored variations with photoperiod change, across months, and seasons. Hypotheses were tested using Bayesian linear mixed-effects models. The study and analyses were pre-registered.
Between April 2024 and September 2025, 418 adults (80% women) completed at least two assessments. Nearly half of participants (47 %) reported experiencing spring fatigue. However, repeated assessments across one year showed no evidence for seasonal or monthly variations in fatigue, sleepiness, insomnia symptoms, or sleep quality. Fatigue during day-to-day activities decreased with longer photoperiods but was independent of photoperiod change.
Overall, the results provide evidence against spring fatigue as a genuine seasonal phenomenon. The discrepancy between high self-reports of the phenomenon and stable longitudinal patterns suggests that spring fatigue may reflect cultural labelling and result from cognitive-perceptual biases rather than reflecting a genuine seasonal syndrome.