Summer Morning Routine: Earlier, Lighter, Cooler
My morning routine breaks every June. The sun rises before 6am in Alabama, the heat hits 80 by 9, and the schedule that works in February stops working entirely.
For years I’d push through and feel sluggish all summer. Now I rebuild the routine in late May. Same anchors, different timing, lighter everything.
A summer morning routine should start 30 to 60 minutes earlier, prioritize hydration, move outdoor activities to before 8am, and lighten skincare and breakfast for hot weather. Use the early light, avoid the midday heat, and rest more in the afternoon. Your winter routine doesn’t translate directly to summer.
Why Summer Routines Need to Shift
Sunlight hits your eyes earlier in summer, which naturally shifts your circadian rhythm. Most people wake 30 to 60 minutes earlier in June than in December, even with blackout curtains.
Heat changes everything else. Outdoor exercise after 9am becomes uncomfortable or dangerous. Heavy breakfasts feel wrong. Skincare layers slide off by noon.
Fighting these shifts wastes energy. Working with them gives you back hours.

My Summer Wake-Up Time
Winter: 6:45 AM. Summer: 6:00 AM.
Same total sleep (7-8 hours), earlier bedtime (10 PM instead of 10:45). The earlier wake gives me 90 minutes of cool morning before the heat builds.
The CDC recommends consistent sleep duration year-round, but your wake time can shift seasonally as long as bedtime shifts with it.
The Summer Hydration Rule
You lose more water in summer even when you’re not sweating visibly. I drink 20 oz of water in the first 20 minutes of waking instead of my winter 16 oz, and I add an electrolyte packet 3-4 mornings a week.
Skip caffeine until you’ve had 16+ oz of water. Coffee on a dehydrated summer body is the fastest way to a 10am headache.

Outdoor Time Moves Earlier
In winter I go outside at 8 AM. In summer I’m out by 6:30 AM, sometimes 6:15.
The cool window (under 75°F) shrinks to about two hours in Alabama summers. Anything outside in that window: walking, yoga, sitting with coffee, light gardening. After 8:30, I retreat indoors until evening.

Summer Skincare Adjustments
Three changes from my winter routine:
Switch the rich cream moisturizer to a lightweight gel. Heavy formulas pile up under sunscreen and slide off in humidity.
Bump SPF to 50 minimum and reapply by 11 AM. UV index is 3-4x stronger in June than January.
Add a hat. Sunscreen alone doesn’t protect your scalp, ears, or the part in your hair.

Read more: Guide to A Healthy Morning Routine
Lighter Breakfast, Cooler Foods
Hot oatmeal feels wrong at 80°F. I switch to cold options:
Greek yogurt with berries and granola. Overnight oats made the night before. A smoothie with banana, frozen mango, and almond butter.
Smaller portions, more fruit, less heavy carbs. Heat suppresses appetite naturally, and forcing a winter-sized breakfast leaves me sluggish.

My Full Summer Morning
6:00 AM: Natural wake, 20 oz water with electrolytes.
6:15 AM: Outside on the back porch with coffee, no phone.
6:45 AM: Light yoga or walk in the yard.
7:15 AM: Cold breakfast, sit by an open window.
7:45 AM: Skincare with lightweight moisturizer and SPF 50.
8:00 AM: Start the workday before the heat does.
By 8 AM I’ve done a full morning routine and the temperature is just hitting 78. Same energy spent, better timing.

What I Stop Doing in Summer
Hot showers first thing. They raise body temperature right when I’m trying to stay cool.
Heavy moisturizer. Slides off, clogs pores, feels gross.
Outdoor workouts after 8:30 AM. Not worth the heat exhaustion.
Long lingering breakfast indoors. I’d rather eat fast and get back outside before it’s too hot.
Final Thoughts
Your morning routine should change with the seasons because your body does. The version that gets you through January is not the version that serves you in July.
Start your summer routine 45 minutes earlier, drink more water, get outside before 8, and lighten everything. Two weeks in, you’ll wonder why you ever fought the season.
