Tame endless scrolling on Android with simple settings, app limits, grayscale, notifications, and focus modes that cut checking without killing your phone.
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Get it on Play StoreAnd yeah, I know how stupid that sounds.
But my phone used to be a slot machine. Wake up, check notifications. Sit down, check something random. Waiting in line? Check. Bored for seven seconds? Check again. I wasn’t even enjoying most of it — I was just twitchy.
So I started messing with Android settings like a control freak, and honestly, it helped more than any “digital detox” pep talk ever did.
The big idea is simple: don’t rely on self-control alone. Make scrolling harder, make checking less tempting, and make your phone a little boring.
This one is huge.
Most mindless checking starts with a tiny buzz or a red badge that whispers, “Something might be happening.” Half the time, it’s nothing. The other half, it’s still not urgent.
Go to Settings > Notifications and start being ruthless.
Here’s what I recommend:
I turned off Instagram and YouTube notifications completely, and I swear my brain calmed down by like 20%. Wild how much noise those apps create when they’re allowed to tap you on the shoulder all day.
Action step: Go app by app and ask, “Would I be upset if I saw this 3 hours later?” If not, mute it.
Android’s Focus Mode is one of the best settings for this stuff.
You can find it in Digital Wellbeing. It lets you pause distracting apps for set periods, which is great because some apps are basically engineered to eat your afternoon.
I use it for the apps I open out of habit, not need. Social media, shopping apps, short-video apps — the usual suspects.
What it does well:
And no, you don’t need to use it only during work. I use it when I’m eating, reading, or trying to sleep. Those little windows matter more than people think.
Action step: Set a daily Focus Mode block for your worst app at the time you usually spiral. For me, it was evenings. For you, it might be mornings.
This is the setting that really made me honest with myself.
Android lets you set app timers through Digital Wellbeing. Once you hit the limit, the app greys out. Is it perfect? No. Can you override it? Sometimes, yes. But that tiny speed bump is enough to break the trance.
And that’s the point — not punishment. Interruption.
Start with:
Don’t set some fantasy number like 5 minutes if you know you’ll ignore it. Be realistic first. You can always reduce it later.
I learned this the hard way. I once set a ridiculous limit and just kept bypassing it like a goblin. That taught me the limit should be challenging, not irritating.
Action step: Check your top 3 most-opened apps in Digital Wellbeing and set timers today.
This sounds small, but it’s sneaky powerful.
If your home screen is full of colorful dopamine traps, you’re going to tap them. If it’s clean, you’re less likely to drift.
Try this:
And if you really want to go further, switch to a grayscale screen during your worst scrolling hours. Color makes everything feel more appealing. Grayscale strips a lot of that “ooh shiny” effect away.
On Android, you can usually find grayscale under Digital Wellbeing or Accessibility, depending on your phone.
I used grayscale for a week and hated how boring it felt at first — which was the entire point. My phone was less exciting, and I opened it less.
Action step: Spend 10 minutes rearranging your home screen so it only shows tools, not temptations.
Red notification badges are pure manipulation. I said what I said.
That little number on an app icon creates pressure. It says, “You have unfinished business.” Most of the time, you don’t.
Turn off badges for non-essential apps:
Keep badges only where they truly matter — maybe messages, email for work, or banking. Even then, be selective.
This tiny change reduced my urge to “clean up” my phone constantly. I didn’t realize how often I was checking apps just to make the numbers disappear.
Action step: Go through your app notifications and remove badges from anything that doesn’t deserve urgency.
A lot of us leave notifications on because we’re scared of missing something important.
So set Do Not Disturb with exceptions instead of letting the whole world ping you all day.
A good setup:
And if you’re the kind of person who checks your phone at every tiny pause, schedule DND during those exact times. Commuting. Dinner. The first 30 minutes after waking up. The last hour before bed.
I used to check messages in bed like I was on emergency duty for a company I didn’t even work for. DND fixed that fast.
Action step: Schedule one daily DND block you can actually stick to, even if it’s just 30 minutes.
Your lock screen shouldn’t be a buffet of distractions.
Go into notification settings and reduce what shows up there. If your lock screen displays every email subject, every app update, and every social alert, you’re basically handing your attention away before you even unlock the phone.
Try this:
And if your phone lights up every time a new alert arrives, that’s a problem too. You don’t need your phone performing in the corner like a needy pet.
Action step: Make your lock screen less informative. The less it tells you, the less you’ll check.
This is one of my favorite tricks because it’s annoyingly effective.
Add a little friction:
The trick is not to make using your phone impossible. Just make it slightly inconvenient.
Because that tiny pause — the extra tap, the login, the annoying prompt — gives your brain a chance to ask, “Do I actually want this?”
Most of the time, the answer is no.
Action step: Pick one app you open mindlessly and add one layer of friction today.
And this part matters more than the settings.
If you just remove the habit and don’t replace it, your hand will still reach for the phone every time you get bored.
So create a swap:
I’ve found that the urge to scroll usually peaks and passes in under a minute if I don’t feed it immediately. That’s why having a replacement helps so much.
Honestly, this is where something like Trider (myhabits.in) fits nicely — not as another app to obsess over, but as a simple way to track the small habits you want more of instead of the ones you’re trying to ditch.
Action step: Write down 3 “replacement actions” and use them when you catch yourself reaching for your phone.
You don’t need to become a monk. You just need a feedback loop.
Once a week, open Digital Wellbeing and look at:
This stuff is humbling in the best way. Sometimes I think I’ve been “pretty good” all week and then the numbers slap me in the face. Very educational. Very rude.
But that’s useful. You can’t fix what you won’t look at.
Action step: Pick one day each week to check your usage stats and adjust one setting.
If you only do 3 things, do these:
That combo changed my phone from a constant distraction machine into something I actually controlled.
And that’s the goal, right? Not to hate your phone. Just to stop letting it yank your attention around all day.
Don’t try to fix everything in one shot. That’s how people rage-quit habit changes and go right back to doomscrolling.
Instead, do this:
That’s it. Simple. Boring. Effective.
And if you want help tracking the habits you’re actually trying to build, give Trider a look on myhabits.in — it’s a nice little nudge when you need one.
So yeah, start with the settings, make your phone less needy, and see how much calmer your brain feels after a week.