Insomnia vs. Sleep Apnea: Which Problem Do You Have?
Insomnia and sleep apnoea both wreck your sleep but in opposite ways. Learn the tell-tale signs of each, the validated tests for both, and how to tell them apart.
Insomnia and obstructive sleep apnoea are the two most common reasons people sleep badly — but they're almost opposites. Insomnia is trouble getting sleep; apnoea is trouble keeping sleep, often without you ever knowing. Telling them apart matters, because the help for each is completely different.
The quickest way to tell them apart
| Sign | Insomnia | Sleep apnoea |
|---|---|---|
| Main problem | Can't fall or stay asleep | Breathing pauses during sleep |
| In bed you feel… | Wired, frustrated, awake | Asleep — often unaware of waking |
| Snoring | Not typical | Loud, often with gasping or choking |
| Mornings | Unrefreshed after little sleep | Unrefreshed despite enough hours; headaches |
| Daytime | Tired but often can't nap | Sleepy enough to doze off easily |
| Bed partner notices | Restlessness, light sleep | Snoring and pauses in breathing |
A useful rule of thumb: insomnia is loud in your head and quiet in the room; apnoea is quiet in your head and loud in the room.
Screen for each
Insomnia — the ISI
The Insomnia Severity Index is seven questions about how hard it is to fall and stay asleep, and how much it affects your day.
Sleep apnoea — STOP-BANG
STOP-BANG asks eight yes/no questions about snoring, tiredness, observed pauses, blood pressure, and body measures. Three or more "yes" answers raises the risk.
Key takeaways
- Insomnia is trouble getting or staying asleep; apnoea is fragmented sleep from breathing pauses.
- Loud snoring with gasping, plus daytime sleepiness, points toward sleep apnoea.
- Lying awake frustrated, with a racing mind, points toward insomnia.
- The ISI and STOP-BANG are validated screens — and you can have both conditions at once.
Why daytime sleepiness is the clue
Both conditions leave you tired, but the flavour differs. Apnoea tends to cause true sleepiness — actually dozing off in passive moments — because your sleep is constantly interrupted. Insomnia more often causes fatigue with a "tired but wired" quality, where napping is hard even when you're exhausted.
The Epworth Sleepiness Scale is the tie-breaker: high Epworth scores lean toward apnoea, while insomnia can leave Epworth scores surprisingly normal.
Free test · ~2 min
Measure your daytime sleepiness
The Epworth Sleepiness Scale helps separate apnoea-style sleepiness from insomnia-style fatigue.
Take the Epworth testMyth
If I sleep through the night, I can't have sleep apnoea.
Which way should you go?
Insomnia, apnoea, or both?
Do you snore loudly, or has anyone noticed you gasp or stop breathing in your sleep?
Frequently asked questions
How do I know if I have insomnia or sleep apnoea?
Can you have both insomnia and sleep apnoea?
Does snoring always mean sleep apnoea?
What's the treatment for each?
Keep reading
Epworth Sleepiness Scale: Score Yourself & What It Means
How the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) works: rate 8 everyday situations, score 0–24, and find out whether your daytime sleepiness is normal, mild, moderate, or severe.
sleepSleep Hygiene That Actually Works
Most sleep advice is either obvious or wrong. Here's the evidence-based core of sleep hygiene — light, caffeine, and a consistent schedule — plus the signs that point to a sleep disorder rather than a bad habit.
sleepMorning Lark or Night Owl? Understanding Your Chronotype
Your chronotype is your body's built-in timing preference — set by genetics and your circadian clock. Learn the science of larks vs owls, social jetlag, and how to work with your natural rhythm.
References
This guide is educational and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified clinician about your individual circumstances.