13 better things to do on your commute instead of scrolling—easy, useful ideas to learn, reset, and feel less fried before work.
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Get it on Play StoreI used to think my commute was “dead time.” So I’d open Instagram, Reddit, emails, then somehow arrive more tired than when I left.
And honestly? That habit was stealing my mornings and evenings. A 20-minute commute turned into 20 minutes of brain sludge.
So I started swapping the scroll for tiny habits. Nothing dramatic. Nothing performative. Just small stuff that actually made my day better.
Here are 13 things to do on your commute instead of scrolling that don’t feel like self-improvement cosplay.
Not a random playlist. Not five half-finished clips. One episode.
Pick a topic you actually care about—money, history, design, relationships, whatever. I like this because it gives my brain one clear lane instead of 47 noisy tabs.
Action step: Save 3 episodes on Sunday night so you’re not hunting during the commute.
I know, I know—paper books sound a little old-school. But they’re weirdly perfect for commutes.
Even 5–10 pages a day adds up fast. That’s a book a month if you stay consistent-ish, and honestly consistency beats mood.
If you can’t hold a book on your commute, use an e-reader or audiobook. Still counts.
Action step: Keep one “commute book” in your bag at all times. No excuses.
This one saved me from forgetting random stuff all day.
Open your notes and dump everything rattling around in your head—tasks, worries, grocery items, that one email you keep dodging. Don’t organize it yet. Just get it out.
You’ll feel lighter in under 3 minutes. That’s not a productivity myth, that’s just how brains work when they stop holding everything at once.
Action step: Use one note called “Commute Dump” and keep adding to it.
This is my favorite swap because it turns commute time into a launchpad.
Ask: What are the 3 things that would make today a win? Not 17 things. Three. If you do those, the day is not a failure—even if everything else gets messy.
I used to start work by reacting. Now I arrive with a plan and feel 10x less scrambled.
Action step: Before you get off the bus/train, write your top 3 in one sentence each.
If you’re trying to build better routines, your commute is a perfect check-in moment. I use it to look at what I actually did this week instead of what I meant to do.
That’s why a habit tracker like Trider (myhabits.in) makes so much sense—it gives you a clean little scoreboard without turning your life into a spreadsheet nightmare.
Action step: Pick one habit to review daily during the commute: water, walking, reading, stretching, whatever.
You do not need a perfect 45-minute study session to make progress. You need repetition.
Use your commute to review 10–15 vocabulary words, listen to a short lesson, or repeat phrases out loud under your breath like a weirdo with a plan. I fully support that.
If you’re learning Spanish, Japanese, French, or anything else, daily exposure matters way more than heroic study bursts.
Action step: Download a language app lesson before leaving the house.
Not a masterpiece. Not “your morning pages” if that sounds annoying. Just one paragraph.
You can write about what you’re stressed about, what you’re excited for, or what you’re noticing on the ride. I’ve had some genuinely useful ideas show up in these tiny writing bursts.
And yes, your notes app is enough.
Action step: Start with “Right now I’m thinking…” and keep going for 5 lines.
I used to roll my eyes at gratitude stuff because some people make it sound like magic fairy dust. But a real, specific gratitude practice is different.
Write 3 actual things:
Specific beats vague. Always.
Action step: Don’t repeat the same 3 things every day. Keep it fresh.
Okay, not every commute allows full yoga energy. But even small movement helps.
Roll your shoulders. Stretch your neck gently. Unclench your jaw—seriously, a lot of us are basically biting our stress all day. If you’re standing, shift weight and reset posture.
Action step: Do a 30-second body scan: jaw, shoulders, hands, back.
This could be finance basics, interview prep, cooking tips, or even a little history. The point is to use the time intentionally, not randomly.
I like this because commutes are perfect for low-effort learning. You don’t need deep focus for every topic. Some things are just good to absorb bit by bit.
Action step: Choose one topic for the month and collect 5 bite-sized resources.
Not in the “send a meme and disappear” way. I mean actually check in with someone.
Send a thoughtful message to a friend, sibling, or parent. Ask how they’re doing. Follow up on something they mentioned last week. It’s small, but it makes relationships feel real instead of floating in the ether.
And let’s be honest—scrolling makes you feel connected while actually being kind of lonely. A real text beats that every time.
Action step: Pick one person per commute and send one meaningful message.
This sounds obvious, but there’s a difference between “background noise” and actually listening.
Make a commute playlist for different moods—calm, focused, energizing, reflective. Then just sit with it. No multitasking. No doomscrolling. Just music.
Sometimes I finish a commute feeling more emotionally reset than after an entire evening at home.
Action step: Build 3 playlists: calm, hype, and focus.
Yep, I said it.
Sometimes the best thing to do on your commute instead of scrolling is absolutely nothing. No input. No stimulation. Just stare out the window and let your brain breathe for a bit.
We’re so addicted to filling every gap that silence feels suspicious. But those blank moments are where ideas land. Or at least where your nervous system stops yelling for 6 minutes.
Action step: Try one no-screen commute this week. Just one.
Here’s the part people skip: you do not need to “become a new person.” You just need to reduce friction.
So make the good options easy:
The easier it is, the less likely you’ll default to scrolling. That’s the whole game.
And if you’re trying to build these into an actual routine, track them somewhere simple. A habit tracker like Trider (myhabits.in) makes it easier to see what’s working and what’s just wishful thinking.
Scrolling on your commute feels harmless, but it’s sneaky. It eats your focus, your mood, and your sense of time. You look up and somehow you’ve absorbed 400 unrelated opinions before 9 a.m.
So use that time for something that gives back—even a little. Read 7 pages. Plan 3 tasks. Write 1 paragraph. That stuff compounds fast.
And if you want a super simple way to keep these small habits going, try Trider (myhabits.in) and see how much better your commute feels when it’s actually doing something for you.