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A break from your smartphone can reboot your mood. Here's how long you need

People who block the internet from their smartphones spend more time on other activities that improve their wellbeing.
Rob Dobi
/
Getty Images
People who block the internet from their smartphones spend more time on other activities that improve their wellbeing.

If you order up coffee on a mobile app while scrolling your social feeds, or can't stop watching videos and reading news articles on your phone at bedtime, listen up!

Researchers studied what happened when people agreed to block the internet from their smartphones for just two weeks. And turns out, 91% felt better after the break.

"What we found was that people had better mental health, better subjective well-being and better sustained attention," says Adrian Ward, a psychologist at the University of Texas at Austin.

The researchers included 467 participants, ages 18 to 74, who agreed to the month-long study aimed at testing the theory that constant connection to everything, all the time, has unintended consequences.

At a time when more then 90% of Americans have a smartphone, we forget that having an internet-enabled supercomputer at our fingertips 24/7 is a new phenomenon.

Ward, who is 38, remembers a dial-up connection in his home as a kid. In those days, the internet lived in a room in your home. "You used it at specific times because you had limited minutes and had to make sure nobody else was using the phone line," Ward recalls.

So, what would it be like to go back to those days? No social media scrolling, no mobile-app shopping, no streaming shows or media on your phone?

The researchers measured three different outcomes of well-being, mood and attention at the beginning, middle and end of the four-week study. While 91% of participants improved their scores in at least one category, 71% reported better mental health after the break, compared to before, and 73% reported better subjective well-being.

The participants completed a survey often used by doctors to assess symptoms of depression and anxiety. It includes questions such as: How often in the past week have you felt little interest or pleasure in doing things you typically enjoy? The participants' responses pointed to a significant lift in mood.

One of the surprising findings is that the decrease in depressive symptoms was on par — or even greater than — reductions documented in studies of people taking antidepressant medications.

"The size of these effects are larger than we anticipated," says the study's first author, Noah Castelo, an assistant professor at the University of Alberta in Canada.

Of course for some people, medications and/or talk therapy are key to managing mental health, and the researchers are not suggesting less internet time is a replacement for that kind of care.

A break from the internet on their phones also improved participants' attention spans, which was measured by a computer task. They tracked images that alternated between mountain scenes and cities. Prior research has shown that performance tends to drop off as people age, but to the researchers' surprise, after the internet break, there was a significant boost in scores. "The effects on attention were about as large as if participants had become 10 years younger," Castelo says.

It's not clear how long-lasting the effect of less time online would be, but this study validates what has been found in observational studies. "It's one of the first experiments that does provide causal evidence that reducing time spent on your phone has all these significant benefits," Castelo said.

When the participants agreed to block the internet on their phones, they were permitted to continue to use laptops or iPads at work or home, and they could also continue to use their phones to talk or text. So, researchers weren't sure if participants would swap phones for another form of screen time.

But, as it turns out, breaking the habit of scrolling on their phones led to significant changes in how they spent their time. And, interestingly, each day the break went on, the benefits increased, almost like a positive feedback loop.

"It's not that you stop using the internet and magically you just feel better," Ward says. What happened is that people spent more time engaged in healthy behaviors.

"People reported that they spent more time in nature, more time socializing, more time doing hobbies," he explains. They also got more sleep and felt more socially connected to other people.

"I'm not surprised by the findings," says Dr. Judith Joseph, a psychiatrist at New York University Langone Medical Center and the author of High Functioning: Overcome Hidden Depression and Reclaim Your Joy. She says surveys show that most people don't want to be tethered to their devices.

"They know their phones are a problem, but they just can't stop," she says. And she says when they start to engage in behaviors such as those seen in study — more exercise, time outdoors, good sleep, more social interactions — it's not surprising that they start to feel better.

"Helping people to retrain their brain to derive joy from healthy activities has an antidepressant effect," she says, so she says the findings pointing to a decrease in symptoms of depression and anxiety makes sense.

"If [people] see this improvement in joy in such a short period of time, then that gives us hope," she says, adding that simple changes can be beneficial.

Try it: Tips for scaling back your own smartphone use

During the study, many participants had to break the rules, just to accomplish things that their jobs or families required them to do, such as turning on a map app to navigate in the car or logging onto a Zoom meeting from their phone. It's a reminder of how dependent we've become on our mobile devices.

It's nearly impossible to go cold turkey, given the demands of our society. So what to do if you want to try this? "If we're expected to be accessible at all moments, then how can we just decide that we're going to disconnect?" Ward asks. It's a societal struggle.

Here are a few ways to ease up on your screen time.

  1. Take short breaks. Since most of us can't turn off the internet and still function, Joseph recommends taking little breaks, beginning with baby steps. "If you can start with 30 minutes here, or 20 minutes there, try to see if you can increase these increments on a weekly basis," she says
  2. Consider a digital detox. Choose one day a week where you and your family power down, except what's needed for communication. Or set a time, either at mealtime, or in the evenings when work is over, to connect face to face with family or friends, making a commitment to be "present" and in the moment.
  3. Manage notification and add "friction." Experts also advise turning off notifications and using apps to limit your time on certain social media. Some tools can help you reduce screen time by adding friction, i.e., making it just a little harder to start using whatever app you're hooked to.
  4. Try a dumb phone. If you're really fed up and want to try something new, consider switching to a "boring" phone, like the old flip phones many of us used to rely on. That way you still have calling and texting (and some other tools, depending on the phone) but scrolling is a lot less compelling.
  5. Pick up a new phone-free activity. It's worth setting new habits in your offline life. Pick up a new hobby or make a regular date with a friend for a phone call. Like to take an evening stroll? Try leaving your phone at home and see how you feel. The more we give ourselves permission to disconnect, the more likely those around us will follow.

Copyright 2025 NPR

Allison Aubrey
Allison Aubrey is a Washington-based correspondent for NPR News, where her stories can be heard on Morning Edition and All Things Considered. She has reported extensively on the coronavirus pandemic since it began, providing near-daily coverage of new developments and effects. She's also a contributor to the PBS NewsHour and is one of the hosts of NPR's Life Kit.