Best iPhone settings to cut screen time without deleting apps—simple tweaks for focus, fewer pickups, and less doomscrolling, starting today.
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Get it on Play StoreI used to think my screen time problem was a “discipline” problem. Spoiler: it was also a phone-settings problem.
My iPhone was basically trained to distract me. Every app wanted attention, every ping felt urgent, and my lock screen was a tiny slot machine. So I stopped uninstalling apps and started changing settings instead. Big difference.
And honestly? This is the smarter move for most people. You don’t need to delete Instagram, YouTube, or Reddit like you’ve joined a monastery. You just need to make your phone less annoying, less rewarding, and way harder to mindlessly open.
Before changing anything, go to Settings > Screen Time and look at your app usage.
Don’t skip this part. It’s uncomfortable, but useful. You might think messaging is the problem, but then you see 2 hours on short-form video and 47 unlocks before lunch. Brutal.
Look for:
That tells you where to focus. Because if you try to “reduce screen time” across everything, you’ll just end up annoyed and doing nothing.
This is the first setting I always recommend: App Limits.
Go to Settings > Screen Time > App Limits and set daily caps for your worst offenders. Start with something realistic, like:
And don’t make the limit heroic. If you currently use an app for 3 hours a day, setting it to 10 minutes is basically self-sabotage. You’ll just tap “Ignore Limit” like a raccoon with a credit card.
So start smaller. Trim 20–30% first. That’s enough to feel it without rebelling against yourself.
Downtime is one of the best iPhone settings nobody takes seriously.
Go to Settings > Screen Time > Downtime and set a block, usually:
During Downtime, only apps you allow will work. That means your phone stops acting like a nightclub at midnight.
My strong opinion? Put messaging and phone calls on the allowed list, and leave the rest out. If you need your phone for emergencies, that’s fine. But do you really need shopping apps at 11:48 PM? No. You need sleep.
And if you keep picking up your phone in bed, this one setting can change the whole game.
Notifications are the biggest scam on your phone.
Go to Settings > Notifications and be ruthless. Turn off alerts for anything that doesn’t need immediate attention. Most apps do not deserve a lock screen presence in your life.
I recommend this order:
And for many apps, the best setting is just: No notifications at all.
Here’s the thing — every ping creates a tiny interruption. And tiny interruptions add up fast. You check your phone for “just one notification,” then boom, you’re watching a 9-minute video about a guy restoring a vintage toaster.
Your lock screen is the front door to your habits. If it’s noisy, you’ll open the phone more often.
Go to Settings > Notifications and choose Count or Stack instead of a long list. Better yet, hide notification previews for most apps:
Also remove widgets from your lock screen if they tempt you into checking stuff you don’t need. Weather is fine. Stocks you haven’t bought? Not helpful. Fitness rings? Sure, if they motivate you. But random app widgets? They’re little traps.
Focus modes are one of the most underrated iPhone settings.
Go to Settings > Focus and set up a few modes:
Then allow only the apps and people that matter in each mode. For example:
The magic is not just blocking apps. It’s creating context. Your phone stops acting like one giant pile of everything.
And yes, you can automate these modes by time, location, or app. That’s where it gets really good. If your Work Focus turns on at 9:00 AM automatically, you’re less likely to drift into junk scrolling “just for a minute.”
This one is tiny but weirdly powerful.
Put your most distracting apps in the App Library and remove them from your home screen. You’re not deleting anything — just making access less automatic.
Why it works: opening an app should require a little bit of intention. If it’s sitting in the front row, you’ll tap it without thinking.
My setup is simple:
And if you really want to level up, move the distracting apps into a folder on the last page of your phone. The extra friction matters. A lot.
Your screen can be engineered to be less addictive. Wild concept, right?
Go to:
And if you want the biggest visual change, use a plain wallpaper. No busy backgrounds. No photo that makes you want to unlock your phone just to admire your aesthetic. Clean and boring is the goal.
A lot of screen time hides inside “just checking one thing.”
If you use Safari a lot, clean it up:
And if your browser is your rabbit hole, make it harder to wander. The less visually stimulating your browser is, the less likely you are to open it for no reason.
Settings help, but they work best when paired with a replacement habit.
So when your phone urge hits, use a simple rule:
That tiny pause breaks the loop.
I like to think of it this way: your iPhone is not the problem — the automatic reach is the problem. If you can interrupt the reach 10 times a day, your screen time drops without a dramatic lifestyle overhaul.
Once a week, spend 5 minutes reviewing Screen Time.
Check:
Then adjust one thing. Not ten. Just one.
That’s how you keep the system working without turning it into a productivity project you hate.
And if you like tracking tiny wins, this is exactly the kind of habit Trider (myhabits.in) can help you stick to — small, repeatable actions instead of giant “new me” promises that collapse by Thursday.
If you want the short version, here’s the setup I’d use right now:
That combo doesn’t make your iPhone less useful. It just makes it less controlling.
And that’s the whole point.
You do not need to uninstall every app to use your phone less. You need better defaults. You need fewer pings, fewer temptations, and fewer “accidental” opens.
So start with 3 changes today:
That’s enough to feel a difference by tonight.
And if you want help turning small changes into a real routine, give Trider a try on myhabits.in — it’s a pretty solid way to keep your good habits from quietly disappearing after day 4.