Claude AI has started telling some users to sleep, drink water, and stop working — and people can’t stop talking about it

A woman lies in bed listening to soothing white noise from a smartphone app
(Image credit: Getty Images)

  • Claude users are sharing stories about the chatbot telling them to stop working and go to sleep
  • The chatbot brings up the idea during long conversations
  • Claude's behavior highlights how well AI can mimic the emotional awareness of a human

People are spending so much time talking to AI chatbots that one of them has apparently started worrying about their sleep schedule. Multiple Claude users have reported that the AI is interrupting long conversations to suggest they go to bed, take a break, drink water, or stop working for the night.

Why does Claude keep telling me to sleep? from r/ClaudeAI

For years, science fiction imagined AI as cold, calculating, and relentlessly efficient. But one of the internet’s most popular chatbots is now doing something unexpectedly human: telling people to go to bed.

Multiple users of Anthropic’s Claude AI have reported the chatbot interrupting long conversations to suggest they take a break, drink some water, or stop working for the night. On the surface, it sounds oddly wholesome.

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Anthropic has spent years positioning itself as the safety-focused AI company, emphasizing alignment, conversational ethics, and behavioral guardrails. The company’s “constitutional AI” system is specifically designed to shape responses around sets of guiding principles rather than relying entirely on human ratings and reinforcement learning.

When that approach encounters midnight code debugging or students during all-night study sessions, the algorithm triggers what is basically a wellness check. Once conversations stretch long enough, reminders about sleep start cropping up. The assistant is still just generating language patterns based on training data and behavioral tuning. But when those patterns arrive in a warm conversational tone after three straight hours of chatting, people naturally interpret them emotionally.

AI quirks

Claude telling users to go to bed feels notable because it clashes with the older science fiction image of machines relentlessly optimizing productivity. Instead, the chatbot sounds tired on your behalf.

There's understandably some reason to think there may also be practical motivations hiding underneath the wellness advice. Long conversations with AI models consume significant computing power, and AI companies continue struggling with infrastructure costs as usage grows. Earlier this year, Anthropic experimented with expanded usage windows during off-peak hours.

Still, the technical explanation only goes so far. Plenty of apps remind people to sleep or take breaks. What makes Claude different is tone. A phone notification telling someone to stop doomscrolling feels easy to dismiss. A chatbot that has been helping with work problems for two hours, suddenly saying “you should really rest,” might land harder. But, according to Anthropic leaders such as Sam McCallister, it's just a "character tic" that shouldn't be obsessed over and will be fixed in the future.

Humans are extremely quick to assign personality, care, and intention to anything capable of sustained conversation. The more natural these systems sound, the harder it becomes for users to maintain emotional distance from them.

Anthropic may not have intended to create the world’s most polite bedtime nag, but the company’s design philosophy clearly nudges Claude toward sounding socially aware and emotionally attentive. Still, when so many AI companies promise their creations will relentlessly focus on making people more productive and efficient, it's notable that people are fascinated when one tells them to close the laptop and get some sleep.


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Eric Hal Schwartz
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Eric Hal Schwartz is a freelance writer for TechRadar with more than 15 years of experience covering the intersection of the world and technology. For the last five years, he served as head writer for Voicebot.ai and was on the leading edge of reporting on generative AI and large language models. He's since become an expert on the products of generative AI models, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude, Google Gemini, and every other synthetic media tool. His experience runs the gamut of media, including print, digital, broadcast, and live events. Now, he's continuing to tell the stories people want and need to hear about the rapidly evolving AI space and its impact on their lives. Eric is based in New York City.

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