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how to stop being addicted to your phone

Quick Scoop

Phone addiction usually improves fastest with a few small friction points, not with sheer willpower alone. The most effective approach is to make your phone less automatic, less tempting, and less available in the moments when you usually reach for it.

What actually helps

  • Turn off nonessential notifications, because constant pings train you to check without thinking.
  • Move social apps off your home screen or delete the worst offenders for a while, so opening them takes effort.
  • Use Screen Time or Digital Wellbeing limits to cap app use and see where your time goes.
  • Keep your phone out of the bedroom at night, since late-night scrolling often becomes a habit loop.
  • Set specific check-in windows instead of checking “whenever,” which helps break compulsive use.

A simple reset plan

  1. Pick your top two problem apps.
  2. Turn off all their notifications except the truly necessary ones.
  3. Put the phone on grayscale or Do Not Disturb during focus blocks.
  4. Charge it outside your bedroom.
  5. Replace one phone habit with a real-world activity, like walking, stretching, or reading for 10 minutes.

Make it easier

The goal is not to become anti-phone; it is to make use more intentional. If you keep failing at “just use it less,” the problem is often the environment, not your discipline.

A practical example: if you always open your phone while waiting in line, choose one substitute like reading one saved article or simply keeping the phone in your bag until you leave the line. Small swaps are easier to sustain than total bans.

When to get help

If phone use is hurting sleep, work, school, relationships, or your mood, or you feel anxious and out of control when you try to stop, that is a sign to seek professional support. If the behavior is tied to anxiety, ADHD, or depression, treating the underlying issue can make the phone habit much easier to change.

Bottom line

Start by cutting notifications, adding limits, and moving the phone out of your most vulnerable moments. Then replace the habit, rather than trying to rely on willpower alone.