Published on June 7, 2026 · 2 min read
How to Reduce Your Screen Time: 7 Methods That Actually Work
On average, we touch our phones more than 2,600 times a day and spend nearly 4 hours on them. If your attention feels like it’s slipping away, you’re not alone — and the good news is that reducing your screen time doesn’t take heroic willpower, just a few smart adjustments.
Here are 7 proven methods to do it for good.
1. Measure before you act
You can’t improve what you don’t measure. Turn on Screen Time (iPhone) or Digital Wellbeing (Android) and face the numbers: which apps are eating your hours? Most people underestimate their usage by half. That single realization is often the wake-up call.
2. Add friction, not bans
Pure willpower almost always fails. What works is friction — making distracting apps slightly harder to reach.
- Remove social media from your home screen.
- Turn off non-essential notifications.
- Switch your screen to grayscale (bright colors are engineered to hook you).
An app like Kaizen takes this further: it inserts a short, mindful pause before you open an addictive app — just enough to break the automatic reflex.
3. Create phone-free zones and times
Decide in advance where your phone doesn’t belong:
- The bedroom: a classic alarm clock replaces the phone, and your sleep will thank you.
- Mealtimes: phone on airplane mode, in another room.
- The first hour of the day: don’t start by reacting to everyone else’s notifications.
4. Replace, don’t just remove
Scrolling often fills a void — boredom, tiredness, stress. Remove the habit without replacing it, and it comes right back. Prepare easy alternatives: a book on the coffee table, a breathing app, a short walk. The goal isn’t deprivation, it’s reinvesting that time.
5. Use limits — with a smart plan B
Standard time limits are too easy to ignore (“just 15 more minutes”). Prefer limits that make you pause and think when you hit them, instead of tapping “Ignore”. The goal: turn an automatic habit into a conscious choice.
6. Protect your evenings
Evening is the most vulnerable time. Blue light and scrolling delay sleep and degrade its quality — which, the next day, increases your craving for stimulation. Break the cycle:
- Set a digital sunset one hour before bed.
- Charge your phone outside the bedroom.
- Swap the last 20 minutes of screen time for reading or breathing.
7. Aim for consistency, not perfection
You don’t need to become a digital monk. A successful digital detox is a healthier relationship, not total abstinence. Aim for 1% better every day: cut 15 minutes this week, then a little more next week. Small steps compound — and they last.
In short
Reducing screen time comes down to three principles: measure, add friction, and replace scrolling with something that does you good. Technology should serve your life, not the other way around.
Your attention is your most precious resource. Invest it in what truly matters.
Put it into practice with Kaizen
Block distracting apps, cut your screen time and build better habits — free on iOS.