In most cases, this nighttime heat is not imagination. The human body follows a built-in biological clock, and body temperature naturally changes across the day. Hormones shift, blood vessels react differently, digestion slows, and the brain prepares for sleep. Together, these changes can make the body feel warmer at night even when the weather stays the same.
But there is another side to this story. Sometimes that extra warmth is not just biology. Stress, food habits, screens, poor sleep, medicines, menopause, infections, or even hidden sleep disorders can quietly turn nighttime into a sweaty struggle.
Sleep researchers often say the body does not simply “switch off” at night. It enters a carefully timed repair mode. And temperature is one of the body’s most important signals during that process.
According to the US National Institutes of Health, the body’s circadian rhythm controls several functions including sleep timing, hormone release, and body temperature.