For people who defeat every alarm

You can silence an alarm in your sleep. A phone call is different.

Heavy sleepers learn to snooze alarms without waking. An incoming call breaks that pattern: a different ring, a required action, and a real voice with a reason to get up. That is why hotels never stopped offering wake-up calls.

Why alarms stop working

Your brain habituates to repeated sounds. After a few weeks the same tone becomes background noise you dismiss automatically.

  • Snoozing becomes muscle memory
  • Louder volume just deepens the habit
  • Missions and puzzles get solved half-asleep

Why a call gets through

A phone call rings differently, demands an answer, and puts a voice in your ear that expects a response — three interruptions at once.

  • Distinct ring pattern your brain has not tuned out
  • Answering requires deliberate physical action
  • A spoken message engages your thinking brain

Build a wake-up system

Pair a scheduled WakeCall with good basics — consistent sleep time, phone away from the bed, light in the morning — and mornings stop being a fight.

Frequently asked questions

I sleep through every alarm. Will a call really wake me?

A call is significantly harder to ignore than an alarm: the ring is different, you must physically answer, and a voice speaks to you. Many heavy sleepers find it is the first thing that consistently works.

What if I do not answer the call?

You can schedule your call earlier than critical deadlines and combine it with a backup alarm. Answering a spoken call is far more waking than tapping snooze.

Do I need to keep an app open at night?

No. WakeCall places a normal phone call, so nothing needs to run on your phone.

Ready to make the call?

Create your account and schedule the call that fits your routine.