How much is your screen time really costing you?
Most people know they spend a lot of time on their phone. Few of us convert that into weekly, monthly, yearly, or life-goal terms. The Screen Time Cost Calculator above estimates the time you may be giving to distracting apps and translates it into the things that time could become instead. That includes equivalent hours of sleep, focus, family presence, exercise, reading, prayer, hobbies, and money value, depending on what you said you wanted.
It's an estimate. It is not a diagnosis or a judgment. Think of it as a quiet audit of where your attention is going, so you can decide if any of it is worth steering somewhere else.
Why screen time feels smaller than it is
Phones are good at hiding their own cost. Ten minutes here, fifteen there, a quick check-in while you wait, and a longer scroll before bed do not feel like much in the moment. Stacked across a week, they often add up to more time than people would believe if you asked them flat out. Short-form video feeds, in particular, blur the start and end of each session, which makes self-reporting unreliable.
The math is unforgiving once you write it down:
- 30 minutes a day equals about 182.5 hours a year, or roughly 11 full waking days.
- 1 hour a day equals about 365 hours a year, or roughly 23 full waking days.
- 2 hours a day equals about 730 hours a year, or roughly 46 full waking days.
- 3 hours a day equals about 1,095 hours a year, or roughly 68 full waking days.
"Waking days" is a more honest unit than "days" because nobody is awake 24 hours a day. The calculator above uses a 16-hour waking day so the comparison lands somewhere closer to lived experience.
The hidden cost of automatic app opening
Most of the time you lose to a distracting app does not start with a decision. It starts with a pattern. Your phone vibrates, or you pick it up for an unrelated reason, or you hit a small gap in your day. You unlock the phone, your thumb lands on the same app it always does, and a few minutes (or twenty) later you surface and wonder where the time went.
That is what we mean by automatic app opening. It is not the screen time itself that causes the regret. It is the absence of a moment between the impulse and the app.
Pax Gate is designed for exactly this moment. It adds a small gate before the app opens. Instead of going from "lock screen" straight to "TikTok feed," you go through a tiny pause first. The pause might ask you to write one thing you're grateful for, or take a breath, or notice something around you, or just confirm that this is what you want to do next. The app still opens. You just open it on purpose.
Screen time is not always bad
This calculator does not assume that all screen time is wasted. Phones are useful. Messaging apps help people stay connected to people they love. YouTube can teach you almost anything. Social media can be funny, kind, surprising, and important. There is nothing wrong with using your phone.
What this calculator does check is whether your unconscious use of your phone is crowding out the things you care about. The work is not "use phones less." It's "open them more on purpose."
Why hard app blockers alone often fail
Plenty of people have tried a strict app blocker and stopped using it within a week. The reason is usually the same: a hard "no" feels like punishment when the app is also where your kids' school chat lives, or where your friends share things, or where your work happens.
Pax Gate's design hypothesis is different. The goal isn't to make the app unreachable. The goal is to make the thoughtless open harder than the intentional one. A small pause in the middle is often enough to turn a 45-minute disappearance into a 5-minute check.
Three styles of friction, ordered from softest to firmest:
- Hard block: "No." Useful if you've already tried lighter friction and still struggle.
- Timer: "Later." Useful for fixed-time uses (work hours, late nights).
- Pax Gate: "Pause first. Then choose." Useful when the underlying habit you want to change is automaticity.
What to do after you've calculated your screen time cost
You don't need to do anything dramatic. Start with one app and one time window. The smallest version of this works:
- Pick the one app that disappears the most time. Don't try to gate all of them at once.
- Pick one danger zone. Bedtime, the morning, work hours, family dinner. Wherever the pull is sharpest.
- Add a small mindful prompt. A gratitude question, a breath, an observation. Something that takes 5 to 10 seconds.
- Watch what happens. Track how often you still choose to continue. That's data, not a verdict.
- Adjust. Add more friction only where it matters. Most people end up gating two or three apps, not all of them.
- Replace. Aim some of the reclaimed time at the thing you wrote down in step 7 of the calculator above. Time you don't redirect tends to find its way back to your phone.
Three examples
The bedtime scroller
- 90 minutes per night, 6 nights per week
- 9 hours per week, ~468 hours per year
- Main cost: sleep, morning energy, and patience the next day
- Recommended Pax Gate setup: a bedtime gate on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube from 9 PM to midnight. Start with a gratitude prompt. Add a Sanctuary Lock if the app keeps winning.
The short-form video loop
- TikTok + Instagram Reels + YouTube Shorts, 2.5 hours per day
- 17.5 hours per week, ~910 hours per year
- Main cost: focus, creative energy, attention residue between tasks
- Recommended setup: gate all three short-form video apps. Increase gate friction after repeated re-opens. Keep messaging apps ungated so the social connection isn't punished.
The anxious news checker
- News apps + X + Reddit, ~75 minutes per day
- ~8.75 hours per week, ~455 hours per year
- Main cost: anxiety baseline, attention residue, sleep quality
- Recommended setup: gratitude or observational gate on news + X + Reddit. Set a limited news window (e.g. 8 AM and 6 PM only). Replace some reclaimed time with a daily walk or a journal entry.
Screen time statistics worth knowing
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Typical internet users spend around 2 hours and 21 minutes per day on social media, according to DataReportal's Digital 2025 reporting.
Source: DataReportal, Digital 2025 Global Overview Report.
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Statista reports global daily social media use at about 141 minutes per day as of February 2025.
Source: Statista, Daily time spent on social networking by internet users worldwide, 2025.
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Pew Research Center reported in 2024 that nearly half of U.S. teens say they are online almost constantly.
Source: Pew Research Center, Teens, Social Media and Technology 2024.
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Pew Research Center reported in 2025 that roughly 1 in 5 teens say social media hurts their mental health.
Source: Pew Research Center, Teens and Social Media: 2025.
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The calculator above is an estimate, not a diagnosis or a medical assessment. Numbers are based on the values you provide.
Frequently asked questions
Is this screen time calculator accurate?
It is an estimate based on the numbers you provide. It is meant to help you understand patterns, not diagnose a condition or judge your habits.
How do I check my real screen time?
On iPhone, use Screen Time in Settings. On Android, use Digital Wellbeing. You can plug those numbers into the calculator for a more accurate result.
Is all screen time bad?
No. Screens can be useful, fun, educational, and connecting. The issue is not screen time by itself; it's unconscious screen time that crowds out things you care about.
What is doomscrolling?
Doomscrolling is the habit of continuing to scroll through negative, stressful, or upsetting content even when it makes you feel worse.
What is automatic app opening?
Automatic app opening is when you unlock your phone and tap an app almost without thinking. Pax Gate is built to interrupt that exact moment.
How can I reduce screen time without deleting every app?
Start with one app, one time window, and one small pause. Add friction before the apps that tend to pull you in, especially during bedtime, work, studying, or family time.
How does Pax Gate help?
Pax Gate adds a mindful gate before distracting apps. Instead of instantly opening the app, you get a small prompt, reflection, breathing exercise, or pause that helps you choose intentionally.
Do I need a strict app blocker?
Not always. Some people need hard blocks, but many do better with mindful friction. Pax Gate is designed for people who want a pause before the scroll, not just a wall.
Why do I need to enter my email?
The calculator can show a quick preview instantly, but the full report is sent by email so you can save it, revisit it, and get a personalized Pax Gate setup.
Pax Gate is launching soon
Join the waitlist for early access. We'll send launch updates and a link to download as soon as it's available on the Play Store.
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