Los Angeles to Sydney: a jet lag plan that fits the route.
Los Angeles (LAX) sits in America/Los Angeles. Sydney (SYD) is west of you, 7 hours behind. The flight is around 14h 46m gate to gate.
Los Angeles, United States to Sydney, Australia crosses 7 time zones — and you’re going west, the gentler direction. Sydney is 7 hours behind home, on a flight of about 14 hours.
Westbound is gentler because your body’s default drift is later, not earlier. You’re going with the grain. The price is feeling sleepy in the late afternoon for a few days while the clock catches up.
For most travelers, that translates to about 5 days of feeling off. We grade this route as hard. The plan below is built around the things that actually move your body clock — light, sleep timing, caffeine, and (if you want it) a small dose of melatonin — applied at the times when they actually work.
How to fly Los Angeles → Sydney without losing the first three days.
- 1Three days before — push bedtime later
Each night before the flight, go to bed and wake up 60 minutes later than usual. Catch evening light, skip morning light. You’re training your body to drift later — which is what it wants to do anyway.
- 2On the plane — stay awake unless it’s an overnight
Westbound, the goal is to roll into the destination already tired enough to sleep on local time. Save your sleep for the destination. Water every hour, alcohol skipped, walk every two hours.
- 3Day one — late-afternoon walk, no morning sun
Get outside in the last few hours of daylight; that’s the light that holds your clock later. Sunglasses early in the morning for the first two days — morning light here would push you back toward home time.
- 4Skip the melatonin, mostly
Westbound jet lag isn’t a melatonin problem — taking it just to sleep is fine, but it doesn’t shift you the way it does eastbound. If you wake up at 3 a.m. and can’t fall back asleep, a single 0.5 mg dose can help.
- 5Caffeine in the morning, cut by mid-afternoon
Coffee in the morning helps you push through to a normal local bedtime. Cut it eight hours before bed (twelve if you’re sensitive).
Related routes
Frequently asked
How many hours is the time difference between Los Angeles and Sydney?+
Sydney is 7 hours behind Los Angeles. The exact gap can shift by an hour twice a year if either city observes daylight saving time.
How bad is the jet lag from Los Angeles to Sydney?+
You’re flying west, crossing 7 time zones. Most people need about 5 days to feel normal. The first 48 hours are the worst — that’s when sleep is the most fragmented and the afternoon energy crash is the deepest.
Should I take melatonin?+
Westbound jet lag is mostly a fall-asleep-too-early, wake-up-at-3-a.m. problem. Melatonin taken at the destination bedtime can help with sleep onset, but it does not really shift your clock the way it does eastbound. A single 0.5 mg dose if you wake up in the middle of the night is the more useful play.
When is the best time to take a nap on arrival?+
Before 14:00 local time, no longer than 30 minutes. Naps later than that bleed into the evening and push your bedtime even further back, which is the opposite of what you want.
Does staying hydrated really help?+
Cabin air is 10–20% humidity (drier than the Sahara). Dehydration mimics the symptoms of jet lag — headache, fatigue, brain fog — so a hydrated traveler is just less miserable, even if their underlying clock hasn’t shifted yet. Alcohol multiplies the effect; skip it on the flight.