Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 11
Summer Challenge Urges 30-Minute Phone Curfew Before Bed to Improve Sleep
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 11

Summer Challenge Urges 30-Minute Phone Curfew Before Bed to Improve Sleep

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 11

Summary

  • A monthlong summer challenge is asking people to shut off their phones 30 minutes before bed and keep them off overnight to improve sleep.
  • A 2025 study in Technology, Mind and Behavior found participants who did a 30-minute bedtime digital detox felt better the next day and used their phones less.
  • Sleep specialists said even calming social media keeps the brain cognitively and emotionally engaged; a 2025 YouGov survey found 43% of Americans often or always browse phones before falling asleep.
  • Experts recommended putting the phone in another room or out of arm’s reach, using do-not-disturb with emergency exceptions, and replacing scrolling with analog routines such as reading, journaling or meditation.
  • The challenge asks people to try the detox nightly for 1 week and watch for even small gains in falling asleep faster or staying asleep longer.

Insights

If blue light isn't the main problem, why is phone scrolling so much worse for sleep than reading a thrilling book?
Can sleep trackers help us disconnect, or do they risk turning our rest into another data-driven source of anxiety?
With digital detox tourism now a $65 billion market, are we just buying back the silence that technology stole from us?