You are in a specific city, at a specific latitude, in a specific week of summer. The sun rises at a particular time, climbs at a particular rate, and delivers a particular quality of light depending on where you are standing. Five minutes of morning sun in Barcelona in June is not the same as five minutes in London. The light is different. The UV is different. The angle is different. The optimal duration is different.
The generic guidance — ten to twenty minutes, go outside, face the light — is not wrong. It is just not specific enough to be useful. This guide makes it specific.
What the duration is actually doing
Morning sunlight acts on the body through two distinct mechanisms, and they require different amounts of time to saturate.
The first is the circadian signal. Light entering the eyes — specifically the short-wavelength blue and the longer red and infrared wavelengths in morning sun — activates photoreceptors in the retina that communicate directly with the suprachiasmatic nucleus, the brain's master clock. This signal suppresses melatonin, rises cortisol, and anchors the body's internal rhythm to the actual time of day. On a clear morning, this signal saturates in roughly ten minutes of outdoor exposure. It cannot be replicated through glass, because windows filter the specific wavelengths that carry the signal.
The second mechanism is the infrared and red light effect on skin and tissue — the cellular repair and mitochondrial activation that makes early morning sun a genuine recovery tool, not just a circadian cue. This takes longer to accumulate and scales with both duration and light intensity. In southern Europe in summer, where the morning sun is stronger, fifteen minutes delivers more of this than thirty minutes of weaker northern light.
This is why the number is not the same in every city.
"On a clear morning, the circadian signal saturates in roughly ten minutes. What the number misses is that ten minutes in Lisbon and ten minutes in Stockholm are not the same ten minutes."
Duration by city — European summer
The table below gives a practical target for each major European city in summer, based on latitude, average UV index at sunrise, and light intensity in the morning window. These are targets for the first 90 minutes after sunrise — the window before UV climbs above three and the spectral balance shifts away from infrared dominance.
| City | June sunrise | Target duration | UV at sunrise | Why |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lisbon 38°N · Atlantic | 6:13 | 10 – 15 min | UV 1–2 | High solar elevation, strong morning infrared. Light quality peaks early and shifts fast. |
| Barcelona 41°N · Med coast | 6:17 | 10 – 15 min | UV 1–2 | Strong morning light, rapid UV escalation after 9am. The morning window is narrow and potent. |
| Madrid 40°N · Inland | 6:20 | 10 – 15 min | UV 1–2 | Similar to Barcelona. Inland altitude means even clearer morning air and strong light intensity. |
| Rome 41°N · Med | 5:36 | 10 – 15 min | UV 1–2 | Early sunrise and strong Mediterranean light. Ten minutes here is efficient. No need for more. |
| Paris 48°N · North | 5:50 | 15 – 20 min | UV 0–1 | Lower solar elevation means less intense morning light. Longer duration compensates for lower lux. |
| London 51°N · North | 4:45 | 15 – 20 min | UV 0–1 | Long summer days but lower light angle. UV negligible at sunrise. Extended window is safe and useful. |
| Amsterdam 52°N · North | 5:18 | 15 – 20 min | UV 0–1 | Northern latitude, frequently overcast. Aim for 20 min on clear mornings, 30 min when cloud cover is present. |
| Stockholm 59°N · Nordic | 3:31 | 20 – 30 min | UV 0 | Low sun angle even in summer. Light is softer and the infrared signal requires more exposure time to accumulate. |
These are targets for clear mornings, taken outside with no glass between you and the sky. On overcast days, add ten minutes to each figure. The light is still working — cloud cover reduces intensity but does not eliminate the circadian signal.
The three things that change the number
City and latitude set the baseline. Three other variables adjust it meaningfully on any given morning.
1 — Cloud cover
A fully overcast sky reduces light intensity by roughly 70 to 80 percent. The circadian signal is still present — the wavelengths still penetrate cloud — but at lower intensity. The practical response is to stay outside longer, not to give up and go inside. Twenty minutes under cloud cover delivers what ten minutes of direct sun does, approximately.
2 — Whether you are through glass
Glass blocks the specific ultraviolet and short-wavelength light that drives the strongest circadian response. Sitting next to a sunny window in the morning is warm. It is not the same as being outside. The duration calculation in the table above assumes direct outdoor exposure. Through a window, the effective dose is a fraction of that, and no duration adjustment fully compensates.
3 — Whether you are wearing sunglasses
The circadian mechanism works partly through the eyes, not just the skin. Sunglasses during the morning window filter the wavelengths that carry the strongest circadian signal to the retina. In the first 90 minutes after sunrise — when UV is at or near zero in all European cities — there is no UV protection reason to wear them. Leave them off. From mid-morning onwards, when UV climbs, wear them.
What to do with the time
Nothing special. The light does the work, not the activity. A walk, a coffee outside, sitting on a balcony facing east, eating breakfast with the door open. The body does not require you to be stationary or still or in any particular posture to receive the morning light signal. It requires you to be outside, without glass between you and the sky, without sunglasses, facing generally toward the light.
The one thing that reduces the effect is looking at a screen. Not because screens are harmful in this context, but because they redirect your attention away from the light and reduce the quality of the exposure. If you are reading your phone for fifteen minutes in a sunny courtyard, you are receiving some light signal. You would receive more if you were simply present in the light without a competing focal point.
"The light does the work, not the activity. Sitting outside with a coffee counts. You do not need to be performing morning sunlight."
After the window closes
The morning window — the 90 minutes after sunrise when UV is low and infrared dominates — closes by around 8am in Barcelona, Madrid, Lisbon, and Rome in June. After that, the UV index begins its climb toward the daily peak, which hits between 11am and 2pm depending on city.
This does not mean you cannot be outside after 8am. It means the nature of the exposure changes. From the moment UV climbs above two or three, you are in a different regime — one where the duration logic shifts from "how long to get the benefit" to "how long before you accumulate damage." Protection becomes relevant. Shade becomes relevant. The freely beneficial window is over.
In London and Stockholm, where UV peaks are lower, this shift happens later and less severely. The window is wider. But it still closes.
The city changes the practice
This is worth being direct about. The morning light practice that works in Barcelona — ten minutes before 7:30am, no sunglasses, facing east, then inside or in shade before 10am — does not translate directly to London. In London, the sunrise arrives before 5am in June and the UV never reaches the intensity of the Mediterranean south. The window is longer, the urgency to be early is lower, the duration needed is higher.
The instinct to follow generic advice — "get ten minutes of morning sunlight" — misses the degree to which the city shapes the practice. A Londoner following Barcelona timings is leaving useful exposure on the table. A Barcelona resident following London timings risks catching the beginning of the UV climb and calling it the morning window.
The exact sunrise time, UV window, and recommended morning light duration for your city, updated weekly, is at the Summer Light Guide.
City recovery guides
Ten minutes is a real number. It is the right number on a clear morning in a southern European city in summer, taken outside, without sunglasses, within the first 90 minutes of sunrise. In London in June, twenty minutes is closer. On a cloudy morning anywhere, add ten. Through a window, none of the numbers apply — you are not in the morning window, you are adjacent to it.
The practice is not complicated. The precision is. And the precision is what makes it work rather than just feel like you are doing something.
Get your city's window every Monday
Sunrise shifts by a few minutes every week. So does the UV peak. The Summer Light Guide calculates both for your city and sends a brief on Monday morning — one email, specific to where you are.
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