TL;DR

To be under 50 mg of residual caffeine at an 11 PM bedtime, have your last Tall 12 oz of Starbucks Coffee Frappuccino (70 mg) by 8:30 PM (20:30). The math uses the median 5-hour caffeine half-life; individual half-lives range from about 2 to 12 hours.

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Starbucks Coffee Frappuccino Last-Call Times by Bedtime

Latest time to finish a Tall 12 oz of Starbucks Coffee Frappuccino (70 mg of caffeine) and still be under 50 mg of residual caffeine at bedtime, assuming the median 5-hour half-life. Your personal half-life may sit anywhere in the 2 to 12 hour range.

BedtimeLast call for Starbucks Coffee FrappuccinoResidual at bedtime
9:00 PM (21:00)6:30 PM (18:30)~49 mg
10:00 PM (22:00)7:30 PM (19:30)~49 mg
11:00 PM (23:00)8:30 PM (20:30)~49 mg
12:00 AM (00:00, midnight)9:30 PM (21:30)~49 mg

Clearance Time by Serving Size

How long each serving of Starbucks Coffee Frappuccino needs before bed to drop under 50 mg:

ServingCaffeineTime needed before bed
Tall 12 oz70 mg2 h 26 min
Grande 16 oz95 mg4 h 38 min
Venti 24 oz130 mg6 h 54 min

Source: caffeine figures from Caffeine Informer Starbucks guide (values sourced from starbucks.com), accessed 2026-06-11. Values can vary by batch, location, and preparation; check the label or the source for the latest figures.

How the Math Works

Caffeine leaves your body by exponential decay. With the median 5-hour half-life, the 70 mg in a Tall 12 oz of Starbucks Coffee Frappuccino falls to 35 mg after 5 hours and 18 mg after 10 hours. To get under 50 mg, the level where caffeine stops measurably delaying sleep for most people, it needs about 2 h 26 min of clearance time. Subtract that from your bedtime and you get the last-call times above, rounded down to the nearest 15 minutes.

The big caveat: the 5-hour figure is a median. Depending on CYP1A2 genetics, medications, smoking, and pregnancy, real half-lives run from about 2 to 12 hours. If caffeine reliably keeps you up, treat these times as too generous and move your personal cutoff earlier, or model your own curve in the caffeine half-life calculator.

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Frequently Asked Questions

There is no magic number, but around 50 mg of circulating caffeine the alerting effect fades for most people, which makes it a practical sleep-ready marker (the same one the Unbuzz app and our half-life calculator use). For Starbucks Coffee Frappuccino, that means the 70 mg in a Tall 12 oz needs about 2 h 26 min of decay to get under that mark. Caffeine-sensitive sleepers may need to aim lower; the calculator lets you change the threshold.
These times assume the median 5-hour half-life, but CYP1A2 genetics, oral contraceptives, pregnancy, some medications, and age stretch individual half-lives across roughly 2 to 12 hours. At an 8-hour half-life, the 70 mg in a Tall 12 oz of Starbucks Coffee Frappuccino needs about 3 h 54 min to clear instead of 2 h 26 min, so a slow metabolizer should stop hours earlier than this table suggests. The caffeine half-life calculator adjusts the curve to your profile.
Yes. The table above is for the Tall 12 oz (70 mg). A Tall 12 oz carries 70 mg and needs about 2 h 26 min before bed. The serving table on this page lists the clearance time for every size.
Standard exponential decay: residual = dose x 0.5^(hours / 5), using the drink's sourced caffeine content (70 mg per Tall 12 oz, per Caffeine Informer Starbucks guide (values sourced from starbucks.com)) and the median 5-hour half-life. The last call is the latest time that leaves under 50 mg at bedtime, rounded down to 15 minutes so the rounding never works against your sleep.

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Medical Disclaimer: Caffeine values are approximate figures from the cited public sources. Actual content may vary by batch, location, and preparation, and caffeine metabolism varies widely between individuals. This page is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. The FDA guideline for healthy adults is up to 400 mg of caffeine per day; the recommended limit during pregnancy is 200 mg per day. Consult a healthcare professional for personalized guidance.