Brick has earned attention because it does something most screen time tools do not: it takes the override button out of your hand. You choose what to block, tap your phone to a small physical device, then need that device again to get blocked apps back.
That is a clever answer to a real problem. Apple Screen Time, Android Digital Wellbeing, and many app blockers can become suggestions once you learn the bypass. Brick adds friction in the physical world.
Timo takes a different route. Instead of making the phone harder to use across the board, Timo focuses on the moment before an app opens: why are you unlocking, how long do you need, and is this the kind of phone time you want more of or less of?
Quick answer
Choose Brick for hard physical friction. Choose Timo for intentional phone time.
Brick is a strong fit if you want a physical NFC device that can sit across the room, in your bag, or on the fridge so unblocking distractions requires a real action.
Timo is a stronger fit if the goal is not only to block scrolling, but to replace it with better phone use: learning, reading, studying, planning, and focused sessions that still happen on your phone.
What Brick does well
Brick pairs a mobile app with a small NFC hardware device. The official product page lists the Brick at $59 with lifetime access to the companion app, no subscription, and support for iOS and Android. The app lets users block selected apps and websites, create up to 10 custom modes, schedule bricking, track history, use Strict Mode, and use five emergency unbricks when needed.
The core benefit is simple: you cannot just tap "Ignore Limit" and keep scrolling. To end a blocked session, you normally need to return to the physical Brick. Reviews from NBC Select and Apartment Therapy both pointed to that physical barrier as the reason Brick felt more effective than ordinary screen time prompts.
People who ignore software limits
If you always bypass app limits, physical friction can help because the exit is no longer just another button.
Home, bedtime, study, and work sessions
Brick makes sense when you can leave the device somewhere deliberate and stay away from it for a while.
Families or shared spaces
NBC Select reported that one Brick can work with multiple phones, which can be useful in a household.
It depends on the hardware habit
If the Brick is nearby, the barrier gets weaker. If you lose it or leave it somewhere awkward, the barrier can become annoying.
Where Brick can feel heavy day to day
Brick's physical model is also where the tradeoffs show up. It works best when you are entering one clear block of time and can leave the device somewhere on purpose. Real phone use is not always that neat.
It starts from reducing phone use
Like many screen time tools, Brick is mainly about keeping apps away. That can help, but it does not do much for the useful phone time you may want more of.
You have to start the block
By default, your apps are available until you begin a Brick session. If starting the session becomes one more thing to remember, the habit can fade.
Small sessions can feel clunky
Brick is strongest for longer blocks. If you need several short bursts of access between interruptions, the repeated bricking and unbricking can become more friction than you want.
The device can be in the wrong place
If you leave home while still bricked, you may be stuck without normal access unless you use one of the emergency unbricks. That is powerful, but it can also be stressful.
Where Timo is different
Timo starts from a different assumption. The goal is not to make every minute on the phone disappear. It is to reduce the automatic loops and make room for the phone time that is genuinely useful.
That difference matters because not all screen time is equal. A reading session, a flashcard session, a language lesson, and a social feed can all happen on the same device, but they do not leave you feeling the same afterward.
Timo also assumes the system should be there before the moment of temptation, not only after you remember to start a focus block. Each unlock can ask for a reason and a time limit, so the habit is built into normal phone use instead of depending on a separate ritual.
Tracks what you want less of
Use Timo to reduce distracting categories like social, entertainment, browsing, games, or feeds.
Tracks what you want more of
Useful phone time counts too. Timo helps you grow time spent learning, reading, studying, planning, or creating.
Uses daily targets in both directions
The goal is not only less phone time. It is less passive phone time and more phone time that supports the life you want.
Brick vs Timo by use case
You need the strongest stop signal
You want to put the key to your distractions in another room, then make unblocking a physical decision.
You want a reason before access
You do not only want apps blocked. You want the unlock itself to ask what you are doing and how long you need.
You want buy once hardware
Brick is sold as a one time hardware purchase with no app subscription, according to its official listing.
You want ongoing habit tracking
Timo requires Pro to use its features and is built for tracking the balance between distracting and productive phone time.
You mostly need to stay away
For bedtime, work blocks, and study blocks, physical separation can be the whole point.
You need many small intentional moments
If your day has interruptions, messages, quick checks, and short useful sessions, Timo is built to add a pause without making every small unlock feel like a reset.
Your phone is also the tool
If your phone holds your books, notes, flashcards, courses, calendar, and study tools, the goal is better use, not total avoidance.
The honest tradeoff
Brick is more forceful. That is its strength. If you put the device somewhere inconvenient, a blocked app is genuinely harder to open. For some people, that is exactly what finally breaks the loop.
Timo is more flexible. That is its strength. It is built for people who want the pause to be part of normal phone use, not something they have to remember to start before every good intention disappears.
The choice comes down to the problem you are trying to solve. If your biggest issue is bypassing limits during long blocks, Brick's physical device is compelling. If your bigger issue is that your phone use keeps slipping into automatic patterns, including when the phone could be useful, Timo's intentional unlock model is the better fit.
Use your phone on purpose
Timo is for people who want better phone time, not just less phone time
Timo helps you reduce distracting app use while increasing the phone time you actually value. Choose what to reduce, choose what to grow, unlock with a reason, set a limit, and track the balance over time.
Join the waitlistQuestions people ask
What is the difference between Brick and Timo?
Brick is a physical phone blocking system that uses an NFC device to start and end blocked sessions. Timo is a software app built around intentional unlocks, time limits, daily targets, and tracking both distracting and productive phone time.
Is Brick better than a software app blocker?
Brick can be better if you need a physical barrier because software limits are too easy to ignore. Timo can be better if you want the pause to be part of normal phone use, with a reason and a limit before access opens, plus tracking for both distracting and useful phone time.
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.