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Break your phone addiction with these proven settings

Break your phone addiction with these proven settings
© Pras Boonwong | Dreamstime.com

Our phones — filled with emails to check, social media to scroll, and apps to open — are designed to keep us glued to them. It’s easy to get sucked in and find it difficult to put the phone down. The app and web developers specifically designed it that way.

Want to be shocked? Listen to my podcast, which details how apps and sites manipulate you. You’ll be aware of the techniques and able to spot them.

Sure, you can rely on willpower. Instead, I know it seems counterintuitive, but you can use your phone’s built-in features to limit the time you spend on it.

First, check your screen time

Your smartphone keeps track of how much time you spend staring at your screen, as well as which apps take up the most time. Here’s how to find your screen time report.

On an Android:

  • Open your Settings menu.
  • Select Digital Wellbeing & parental controls.

On an iPhone:

  • Open Settings and select Screen Time.
  • Go to See All Activity.

You’ll see a graph of your activity, from the daily average time spent on your phone to your most popular apps. You can even see how many times you unlocked your phone.

Setting limits on an iPhone

Need time away from your phone? You don’t need to lock it in a safe. Your iPhone has settings to reduce how much you use it while keeping it around in case you really need it:

  • Go to Settings > Screen Time, then tap Turn On Screen Time.
  • Select Continue on the next page and tap This is my iPhone. (Note: There is an option to select This is My Child’s iPhone if you want to set it up on theirs.)
  • Tap Downtime, then slide the toggle next to Scheduled to the right to enable it. This turns on downtime for the time you select. A downtime reminder will appear 5 minutes before it begins.
  • Select Every Day or Customize Days, then set the start and end times.

Only calls, messages, and apps you choose to allow are available during downtime.

Now, you probably need to access some apps throughout the day for work or other important matters. You can set limits for app categories or individual apps in iOS:

  • Go to Settings > Screen Time and turn on Screen Time.
  • Tap App Limits > Add Limit.
  • Select as many app categories as you want or get them all at once by selecting All Apps & Categories.
  • To select individual apps, tap a category to see all the apps in the category, then select the apps you want to limit.
  • Tap Next and set the time limit. You can set a time for each day by tapping Customize Days.
  • Tap Add when you’re finished.

Limit app usage in Android

Android’s Digital Wellbeing app lets you set app timers and schedule display changes. You can limit how much time you spend in individual apps:

  • Open your phone’s Settings app.
  • Tap Digital Wellbeing & parental controls, then tap the chart.
  • Next to the app you want to limit, tap Set timer.
  • Choose how much time you can spend in that app. Then, tap Set.

You can limit notifications for individual apps as well:

  • Open Settings, then tap Notifications > App settings.
  • Under Most recent, find apps that recently sent you notifications. Tap All apps to see more.
  • Tap the app you want to silence.
  • Turn the app’s notifications on or off.

You have the start. Now, it’s up to you!

Tags: Android, Apple, Apple iPhone, apps, digital wellbeing, Kim Komando, notifications, phone, podcasts, screen time, settings, smartphones, social media, technology