The twin currents of caffeine and theanine — a centuries‑old evening debate
Tea’s relationship with sleep is a puzzle wrapped in a paradox. For centuries, Chinese tea culture has assigned certain teas to morning energy and others to evening calm, long before anyone isolated caffeine or L‑theanine. Aged white teas like Shòu Méi (寿眉) from Fuding and well‑fermented shōu pǔ’ěr (熟普洱) from the Menghai region in Yunnan were traditionally sipped after dark, their producers and drinkers insisting they ‘settle the qi’ rather than jangle the nerves. Meanwhile, fresh green teas and high‑caffeine oolongs were kept for daylight hours. In 2021, a systematic review published in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology catalogued these traditional beliefs, noting that they align with modern biochemical profiles — but folk wisdom alone can’t tell us how sleep architecture actually changes.
Today’s conversation hinges on two interacting molecules. Caffeine blocks adenosine receptors, delaying sleep onset and reducing deep slow‑wave sleep. L‑theanine, uniquely abundant in tea, promotes alpha‑wave brain activity — the calm, focused state akin to meditation — and may partially buffer caffeine’s arousing effects. The net impact on sleep depends on dose, timing, and individual metabolism. This is the territory explored in our article ‘Tea late at night — what it does to sleep architecture’, which examines polysomnography studies where participants drank tea two hours before bed. Across trials, even a modest cup of green tea (≈30 mg caffeine) was enough to suppress delta power in the first sleep cycle, though the degree varied with CYP1A2 genotype — the gene that dictates how fast you clear caffeine. Meanwhile, another line of inquiry asks whether certain teas are so low in caffeine or rich in sedative compounds that they might actually support sleep onset. ‘Aged tea as an evening routine — what the small studies show’ reviews pilot trials using aged white tea and 15‑year‑old sheng pu’er, where subjective sleep quality improved in some older adults, though objective polysomnography data remains sparse.
The region of Fuding in Fujian province offers a compelling reference: white tea producers there have been deliberately aging cakes since at least 2012, when the Fuding Tea Industry Bureau issued guidelines for ‘aged white tea’. By five to seven years, the caffeine content per gram has dropped by roughly 10–15% due to sublimation and microbial transformation, while the ratio of theanine to caffeine shifts favourably. Anecdotal reports from Chen Hui Yi, senior white‑tea expert at tea.doctor, suggest that many of her clients in Guangdong explicitly seek out a 2017 Fuding Shou Mei cake for its ‘evening‑friendly’ character. Whether these effects are clinically meaningful beyond placebo remains an open research question, but the direction of enquiry is clear.
As the wellness audience grows, so does the need for nuance. The tea.doctor site exists at the intersection of tradition and evidence, never prescribing dosage but presenting what’s known — including disclaimers that nothing here constitutes medical advice. For deeper dives, the research library links to PubMed entries on tea polyphenols and sleep macro‑architecture. If you want to explore the sensory side of evening sessions, thetea.app offers guided tastings of low‑caffeine profiles, and tea.school runs a module on ‘Biochemistry of Relaxation’ that unpacks the theanine‑GABA pathway in detail. Brew mindfully, and listen to your own body — the night is the final test.