Minimum Rest Between Shifts: Rules of Thumb That Protect Your Team
How long must the gap between two shifts be? The honest engineering answer and the most common legal answer happen to agree: eleven hours. Understand why, and most rest-rule questions answer themselves.
Why eleven hours
Count backwards from a healthy night's sleep: 7-8 hours asleep, plus commuting both ways, a meal, a shower, and the basic life that has to happen between shifts. Eleven hours door-to-door is what genuinely yields 7 hours in bed. Gaps below that — quick returns — reliably produce short sleep, and short sleep produces the next day's elevated error rates. The research on quick returns is among the most consistent in shift-work science.
Where the law sets floors
Many jurisdictions wrote the benchmark into law. The EU Working Time Directive grants 11 consecutive hours of daily rest (member states implement variants); the UK retains the same 11-hour rule. Brazil's CLT sets the intervalo interjornada at 11 hours. Australia's awards typically provide 10-12 hours between rostered shifts (commonly 10, with overtime consequences for breaching it). The US has no federal daily-rest rule — but sector rules (transport, aviation, rail) and several state/city fair-workweek laws impose gaps or premium pay for short turnarounds. Thailand and India regulate through daily-hour and spread limits rather than an explicit gap in most sectors. Wherever you operate: check the specific rule, then treat 11 hours as the design floor even where the legal floor is lower.
Auditing your roster
Quick returns hide at pattern seams: evening-to-day transitions in backward rotations, the post-nights re-entry, swap-created collisions, and on-call callouts landing before morning shifts. The audit is mechanical — compute every gap between consecutive shifts per person for a roster cycle and flag anything under 11 — and it's exactly the check scheduling software should run on every publish and every swap request automatically. Tommy blocks the violating swap before it happens rather than discovering it in the incident review.
Build this schedule in Tommy
Set the rotation once and Tommy fills the weeks ahead — shift swaps, leave and coverage gaps handled in one place, with your team always seeing the latest version.



