Stop hitting snooze 5 times every morning. Use these blunt, practical habits to wake up faster, get out of bed, and keep your mornings under control.
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Get it on Play StoreI used to think snoozing was harmless. Just 5 more minutes. Just one more tap. Then suddenly it was 7:42, I was sweaty, annoyed, and already behind.
And honestly, the snooze button doesn’t give you rest. It gives you fragmented fake sleep and a worse mood. You wake up half a dozen times, your brain never actually boots up, and by the time you stand up, you’ve already lost the morning.
So if you’re hitting snooze 5 times, the problem is not that you’re “bad at mornings.” The problem is your system is built to fail.
This is the first fix, and it’s the one people resist the most. Your alarm should not be within arm’s reach if you have a snooze habit.
Put your phone across the room. Better yet, put it somewhere annoying. I’m talking dresser, desk, bathroom counter, anywhere that forces you to stand up.
And no, placing it on the nightstand “but facing away” is not a strategy. That’s just you being optimistic at 6:12 a.m.
If you really want to break the pattern, use a separate alarm clock and keep your phone away from the bed. The goal is simple - once you’re upright, snoozing gets much harder.
A lot of snoozing happens because your body is fighting you. So make the first 60 seconds less miserable.
Before bed, do three stupidly simple things:
Then when the alarm goes off, drink the water immediately. Not later. Immediately. It sounds too basic to matter, but even a few gulps help your brain wake up.
And if you can, turn on a bright light right away. Light tells your body it’s time to stop acting like a cave animal. Morning light is one of the fastest ways to reduce that heavy, half-dead feeling.
This was my biggest mistake for years. I used to wait until I felt awake enough to get up.
That feeling never came.
So here’s the move: don’t negotiate with yourself in bed. You only need one decision, made before you sleep. The decision is: when the alarm rings, feet on floor.
No checking the weather. No “just five more minutes.” No lying there thinking about your life. The more you think, the more likely you snooze.
And if your brain argues with you in the morning, have a script ready. Mine is stupidly simple: “I don’t need to feel good. I just need to stand up.” That line has saved me more times than I want to admit.
Sometimes snoozing 5 times is not a willpower issue. It’s a sleep issue.
If you’re sleeping 6 hours and expecting to pop out of bed like a motivational video, that’s fantasy. Most people need around 7 to 9 hours. If you’re consistently under that, the snooze button is just exposing the problem.
So check the obvious stuff:
I had a phase where I kept snoozing because I was staying up “just one more episode” every night. Predictably, the mornings were a disaster. The fix wasn’t a better alarm. It was shutting the laptop at 11:00 p.m. instead of pretending I was a night owl.
And if your sleep is consistently terrible, don’t just slap a productivity hack on it. Fix the actual sleep problem.
If you can still snooze without thinking, the system is too soft.
So add friction. That’s the whole game.
Try one of these:
And yes, that sounds dramatic. Good. Your current setup is already too comfortable.
The point is to make snoozing feel like more effort than getting up. Right now, it’s probably the opposite.
If your morning starts with nothing but dread, snoozing gets more appealing.
So make the first 10 minutes of your day slightly rewarding. Not perfect. Just not awful.
You could:
I’m not saying “romanticize your morning” in that annoying internet way. I’m saying give your brain a tiny reward that’s better than the bed.
Because if the bed is the best part of your morning, of course you’re going to keep going back to it.
If you want to stop snoozing 5 times, pay attention to when it happens most.
Is it worse after late nights? Sunday night? After drinking? On cold mornings? During stressful weeks? If you don’t look for the pattern, you’ll keep treating every bad morning like a mystery.
Track it for 7 days. Just note:
You’ll probably spot something obvious. Mine was late nights plus phone scrolling. The snoozing wasn’t random. It was predictable.
And that’s good news, because predictable problems can be fixed.
This is the part people skip. They try to “be disciplined” for 3 mornings, then relapse.
Motivation is unreliable. Systems are better.
That’s why I like using Trider (myhabits.in) for stuff like this. It makes the pattern visible instead of letting your mornings blur together. When you can see how often you snooze, you stop lying to yourself about it.
A simple habit tracker can keep you honest without turning your morning into a military operation.
If you want a practical plan, do this for one week:
That’s it. No elaborate transformation. No new personality.
And if you mess up one morning, don’t write off the whole week. Just collect data and keep going the next day.
Stopping snooze isn’t about becoming some hyper-disciplined morning person. It’s about removing the easy escape hatch and making the first minute of your day less painful.
So make the alarm harder to ignore, sleep enough, and stop trusting your sleepy brain to make good decisions.
And if you want help keeping the streak alive, try Trider and use it to track your wake-up habit for a week. It’s way easier to stop snoozing when you can actually see the pattern.