Best non-annoying app blockers for iPhone and Android. Find focused, flexible blockers that actually help you work, study, and stop doomscrolling.
Privacy policy for Mindcrate website
Not getting results from your habit tracker? Here’s how to tell when it’s time to switch methods, with clear signs and better options.
Simple habit trackers beat fancy ones because they’re easier to use daily. Here’s why boring wins, plus practical tips to stick longer.
Can habit tracking improve your sleep? Learn how to test it with a simple 14-day experiment, track the right habits, and spot what really works.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play StoreI’ve tried a stupid number of app blockers over the years, and most of them make me want to rebel within 10 minutes.
And that’s the problem.
A blocker shouldn’t feel like a tiny prison guard yelling at you every time you open Instagram “just for a second.” It should feel like a gentle speed bump — enough friction to break the habit, not enough drama to make you hate your phone.
The best blockers are annoying to your bad habits, not to you.
So if you’re on iPhone or Android and want something that actually helps without making your day miserable, here’s the real list.
A good blocker does three things well.
First: it’s easy to set up. If it takes 45 minutes and a YouTube tutorial, I’m out.
Second: it gives you control. I want schedules, limits, and exceptions. Not some rigid nonsense that blocks my banking app because I dared to use my phone after 8 p.m.
Third: it doesn’t bully me with too many popups. One clear reminder? Fine. Five dramatic warnings? Absolutely not.
And honestly, the best blockers work with your habits, not against them. If you’re trying to build better routines, something like Trider (myhabits.in) can help you track the habit side too — because blocking apps is only half the battle.
This is the most obvious choice, and honestly, it’s underrated.
Apple’s built-in Screen Time is free, already on your phone, and good enough for a lot of people. You can set app limits, downtime, and content restrictions without downloading anything extra.
Why I like it:
But here’s the catch: it’s only as good as your self-control. If you set a limit and then ignore it, well… that’s on you.
Best use case:
My honest take: start here before paying for anything. A lot of people don’t need a fancy app — they need a better setup.
This one is clever. And I mean actually clever, not “clever” in a gimmicky app-store way.
One Sec adds a tiny pause before you open distracting apps. That pause is the whole point. It interrupts the autopilot tap-tap-tap behavior that gets you into doomscrolling without thinking.
Why it’s non-annoying:
That’s huge.
Best use case:
I like this style of blocker because it respects reality. You’re not trying to become a monk overnight — you’re just trying to stop opening apps on reflex.
Opal is for people who want more control and don’t mind paying for polish.
It’s one of the better-looking and better-designed blockers on iPhone. You can schedule focus sessions, block apps, and create routines that are actually usable.
Why people like it:
The annoying part? Some of the best features live behind the paid version. But if you’re serious about focus, it can be worth it.
Best use case:
Strong opinion: if an app blocker looks like it was designed in 2014, I trust it less. Opal gets the design part right.
Freedom is the old reliable. It blocks websites and apps across devices, which is great if your distractions aren’t just on your phone.
Why it’s useful:
This is the one I’d pick if your real problem is “I keep switching from phone to laptop to phone again like a raccoon.”
Best use case:
It’s not the cheapest option, but it’s solid. And it doesn’t try too hard to be cute.
Android’s built-in Digital Wellbeing is the Android version of Screen Time, and it’s a very good starting point.
You can:
Why it works: It’s already there, and it’s simple. You don’t need to install some weird third-party thing that wants access to everything on your phone.
Best use case:
If you’re on Android and haven’t checked this yet, do that first. Seriously. It’s usually enough for most people to get started.
This one is for people who want stronger controls on Android without making things miserable.
Stay Focused lets you block apps, set usage limits, and create strict schedules. It’s more customizable than the built-in tools, which is great if your habits are messy.
Why it’s non-annoying:
Best use case:
I’d recommend this if you’ve already tried the built-in options and thought, “Cute, but I can still bypass this in 12 seconds.”
BlockSite is popular for a reason. It’s easy to use and works for both apps and websites.
What I like:
It’s not the most elegant app in the world, but it gets the job done. And sometimes that’s enough.
Best use case:
Here’s the short version.
Choose Screen Time on iPhone or Digital Wellbeing on Android if you want free and simple.
Choose One Sec if you want gentle friction instead of a hard block.
Choose Opal or Stay Focused if you want stronger structure and better scheduling.
Choose Freedom if you need phone + laptop blocking together.
Choose BlockSite if you want easy website and app blocking with minimal fuss.
This part matters more than the app itself.
Don’t block your whole phone unless you’re actually trying to go full cave mode.
Start with the biggest offenders:
If you block too much, you’ll just turn off the blocker. Been there. Multiple times. Very annoying. Not effective.
The best setup is usually:
You don’t need the same rules all day. That’s how you create backlash.
If you block a habit, replace it with something specific.
Examples:
That last one is why habit apps matter. If you’re trying to build a better routine, blocking distractions is easier when you can see progress somewhere else. That’s where Trider (myhabits.in) fits in nicely — it’s a simple way to keep the momentum going.
Not impossible. Just inconvenient.
A passcode you don’t memorize instantly helps. A delay before opening the app helps. A “focus session” with a clear end time helps.
The goal isn’t punishment — it’s interrupting autopilot.
This is the part people skip.
Every week, ask:
Tiny adjustments make a huge difference. And honestly, most “failed” blockers are just badly configured blockers.
If I had to choose only a few:
That’s my honest shortlist. No fluff.
The best app blocker is the one you’ll actually keep using.
Not the strictest one. Not the one with the coolest marketing. Not the one that makes you feel like you’ve joined a productivity cult.
The best blocker is the one that makes distraction a little harder and focus a little easier.
Start small. Block one or two apps. Set one schedule. Test it for a week. Then tweak it until it feels livable.
And if you want to pair that with a simple habit-tracking system, give Trider (myhabits.in) a shot — it’s a pretty solid way to keep your momentum going without overcomplicating your life.