If Apple Screen Time is easy to ignore, the next step is usually an app blocker. But the best app blocker for iPhone is not the same for everyone. Some people need stricter schedules. Some need a pause before social apps. Some need a physical object to make access harder. Some do not want to hate their phone, they want to use it better.
This guide compares the main types of iPhone app blockers and when each one makes sense. It also explains where Timo fits: reducing distracting app use while increasing useful phone time.
Short answer
The best app blocker is the one that matches the habit you are trying to change
Choose a strict blocker if access needs to be blocked outright. Choose a pause app if you need one moment to reconsider. Choose a physical blocker if you want friction outside the phone. Choose Timo if you want to reduce distracting phone time while building more useful phone time.
Quick picks: best iPhone app blockers by use case
Apple Screen Time
Best if you want simple built-in limits, downtime, app limits, or parental controls without installing another app.
Opal or Jomo
Best if you want scheduled focus sessions, app blocking, stricter access rules, and a more traditional blocker workflow.
one sec
Best if you want a short intervention before opening a distracting app, especially when you still want access after a deliberate pause.
Brick
Best if you want a physical device or NFC-based routine that makes blocked apps harder to unlock casually.
Timo
Best if the goal is not only less screen time, but less scrolling and more intentional phone time for learning, reading, studying, planning, and progress.
Why Apple Screen Time is a good starting point, but often not enough
Apple Screen Time gives iPhone users useful built-in tools: app limits, downtime, communication limits, content restrictions, and activity reports. For simple boundaries, it may be enough.
The problem is that many people override limits automatically. A warning appears after the app is already open, when the habit is already running. That is why dedicated app blockers often focus on stricter sessions, stronger friction, or a pause before access.
The deeper issue is that limits alone do not decide what the phone is for. Reducing every minute is not always the right goal. One hour of learning is different from one hour of scrolling.
How to choose the right iPhone app blocker
Do you need less access or better access?
If an app is harmful every time you open it, strict blocking may be right. If the app is useful sometimes, intention and time-boxing may work better.
Do you override limits without thinking?
If yes, look for a blocker that changes the moment before access, not only the warning after time is already spent.
Do you want to grow useful phone time?
If you use your phone for reading, studying, notes, courses, planning, or learning, choose a system that separates useful phone time from passive loops.
Do essentials need to stay practical?
Messaging, maps, calendar, banking, and utilities often need access. A system that is too annoying may be abandoned quickly.
Comparison: what each blocker is best for
Screen Time
Good built-in option for basic app limits and activity awareness. Less helpful when the problem is automatic overriding or replacing scrolling with something better.
Polished focus sessions
Strong if you want a dedicated app blocker with focus sessions, reports, and strict blocking. Read the full Opal vs Timo comparison.
Flexible blocking routines
Strong if you want flexible app blocking and scheduled focus routines. Read the full Jomo vs Timo comparison.
Pause before distraction
Strong if you want a brief intervention before opening distracting apps. Read the full one sec vs Timo comparison.
Physical friction
Strong if a physical routine helps you keep distracting apps away. Read the full Brick App vs Timo comparison.
Better phone time
Strong if you want to reduce distracting app time while increasing intentional phone time for learning, reading, studying, notes, planning, and useful breaks.
What makes Timo different from a normal app blocker
Most app blockers treat the phone as something to reduce. Timo treats the phone as something to use more intentionally. The goal is not just a smaller screen time number. The goal is a better balance.
Reduce distracting app time
Choose the apps and categories that pull you into autopilot, then make access harder to start without a reason.
Increase useful phone time
Set targets for reading, learning, studying, notes, planning, and the phone use you want more of.
Put intention before the unlock
Before access opens, choose why you are opening and how long the session should last.
Use practical exceptions
Keep essentials like messages, maps, banking, calendar, and utilities available when daily life needs them.
When a strict blocker is the better choice
Timo is not trying to be the only right answer. If you need the most aggressive blocking possible, a strict focus-session app or a physical blocker may be a better fit. That is especially true if the goal is to make access nearly impossible during work, school, sleep, or family time.
If the problem is more nuanced, a strict blocker can feel too blunt. Many people still need their phone for school, work, navigation, communication, and useful learning. In that case, the better question is not just what to block. It is what kind of phone time you want to have instead.
Bottom line
Do not only ask which app blocks hardest. Ask which app changes the habit.
A blocker can stop access. A better phone system changes the moment before access, then helps you spend more time on the phone use you actually value.
Join the waitlistQuestions people ask
What is the best app blocker for iPhone?
The best app blocker for iPhone depends on the job. Apple Screen Time is a useful built-in starting point, Opal and Jomo are strong for scheduled blocking, one sec is strong for adding a pause, Brick is strong for physical blocking, and Timo is built for better phone time, not just lower screen time.
Is Apple Screen Time enough as an app blocker?
Apple Screen Time can be enough for simple limits, downtime, and parental controls. Many people need more help when limits are easy to override or when they want to replace distracting phone use with useful phone time.
Should an app blocker block productive apps too?
Sometimes, yes. Reading, studying, notes, and learning apps can still become automatic if they are always one tap away. Timo can put both distracting and productive apps behind a reason and a duration when intentional access is useful.
Does Timo require a subscription?
Timo requires an active Pro subscription to use its app features. Subscription details, pricing, and any trial information are shown before purchase through Apple's In-App Purchase system.