Singapore → Tokyo
Live local times and jet lag impact for the Singapore–Tokyo route.
1 Hour Ahead
A 1-hour difference is a mild shift. Most travellers adapt naturally within 1–2 days without a structured plan, though light management still helps.
What This Shift Means for Your Body
A 1-hour difference causes mild circadian disruption. Your internal clock is flexible enough to absorb shifts of this size relatively quickly — most travellers feel normal within 1–2 days.
You may notice slightly disturbed sleep on the first night and some early morning or late evening grogginess, but energy levels generally recover without a structured intervention.
The Science Behind the Shift
Jet lag occurs because your circadian rhythm — the internal 24-hour clock regulated by the suprachiasmatic nucleus in your brain — remains locked to your origin time zone after rapid transmeridian travel.
Light is the most powerful reset signal for this clock. Exposing yourself to bright light at the right phase of your internal cycle can advance or delay it by 1–2 hours per day. For a Singapore–Tokyo crossing of 1 hours, this means recovery is achievable well within your trip — if timed correctly.
Meal timing and physical activity act as secondary zeitgebers. Aligning these with Tokyo local time reinforces the light-driven shift and reduces gastrointestinal symptoms that often accompany long-haul travel.
Eastbound Tips for Singapore → Tokyo
Go to bed 30–60 minutes earlier each night for 2–3 days before your flight to begin advancing your clock towards Tokyo time.
Sleep during the first half of the flight if it is overnight. Use an eye mask and earplugs to improve sleep quality in the cabin environment.
Seek morning light in Tokyo as early as possible after landing. Avoid napping past early afternoon on your first day.
Times shown are current at page load · Jet Lag Plan™ — Science-Based Recovery