Alternatives roundup &middot; Reviewed July 15, 2026

# PushUp Time Alternatives

PushUp Time blocks your chosen apps and unlocks them after camera-counted exercise (pushups, squats, sit-ups) on iOS and Android, with a free tier. If the free limits pinch, the per-unlock model stops working, or you want a hard daily cap with a redemption window and social accountability, the six options below cover each gap. ScreenFine is the closest match with a stricter lock model.

#1 &middot; Best for: A hard daily cap plus a week to redeem, not per-unlock reps

## ScreenFine(this is us)

$1/week iOS

ScreenFine is the enforcement-first take on the same idea. Set a daily limit and your chosen apps lock the moment you cross it. Each 15-minute overage owes a verified action (25 pushups, 25 squats, 1,000 steps, a workout, or 10 mindful minutes), redeemable for a week before it becomes a recorded slip. Where PushUp Time asks for reps every time you open an app, ScreenFine caps the whole day and adds an AI villain, a Wall of Shame, and partner mode. The right switch if PushUp Time became a toll you pay on autopilot.

Pros

- + Daily total cap rather than per-app-open reps
- + Hard lock on overage with a 1-week redemption window
- + AI villain plus Wall of Shame and partner mode
- + Camera-counted pushups and squats, plus steps and mindful minutes
- + Built on Apple FamilyControls for OS-native shielding

Cons

- - iOS only (PushUp Time also runs on Android)
- - No permanent free tier (7-day trial then $1/week)
- - One daily cap, less granular than per-app unlocks

[Get ScreenFine](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/screenfine-screen-time-limit/id6760267071) [See pricing](/pricing/)

#2 &middot; Best for: The widest exercise variety and guided workouts

## Pushscroll

Subscription iOS, Android

Pushscroll turns scrolling into a gym: reps buy minutes, with pose-counted pushups, squats, lunges, jumping jacks, and more, plus guided workouts and Apple Health step integration. The most fitness-forward option if you want the unlock to double as a real workout. Subscription required, and like PushUp Time it is earn-as-you-go rather than a daily cap.

Pros

- + Widest exercise variety with pose detection
- + Guided workouts and habit-journey progression
- + Earns minutes from Apple Health steps too
- + Cross-platform (iOS and Android)

Cons

- - Subscription required with no lasting free tier
- - Per-minute earning can become a grind you game
- - No hard daily cap

[Visit Pushscroll](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/pushscroll-screen-time-control/id6741765734)

#3 &middot; Best for: Steps-first unlocking with a one-time-purchase option

## StepBloc

Subscription + lifetime option iOS

StepBloc makes steps the primary way to unblock apps (with pushups and squats as options), plus a scheduler, usage limits, and a focus tracker. The one exercise-unlock app here with a lifetime purchase instead of a forever subscription. Best if you would rather walk off your screen time and pay once.

Pros

- + Steps-based unlocking suits walkers
- + Lifetime purchase option, not subscription-only
- + Scheduler and usage limits built in

Cons

- - iOS only
- - Per-unlock model rather than a hard daily cap
- - Smaller exercise variety

[Visit StepBloc](https://stepbloc.com/)

#4 &middot; Best for: Polished scheduled focus without exercise

## Opal

$80-100/yr iOS, Android, macOS

Opal is the premium friction blocker with scheduled Deep Focus sessions, per-app limits, and detailed analytics, and no exercise mechanic. The right move if PushUp Time felt like a gimmick and you just want clean scheduled blocks with a considered UI.

Pros

- + Most polished UI in the category
- + Cross-platform across iOS, Android, and Mac
- + Strong scheduled focus-session mechanic

Cons

- - Among the most expensive options
- - Override is one tap away
- - No consequence or exercise on overage

[Visit Opal](https://www.opal.so/) [ScreenFine vs Opal](/compare/vs/opal/)

#5 &middot; Best for: A free baseline before any paid app

## Apple Screen Time

Free iOS, iPadOS, macOS

Apple Screen Time is free and built in, with app timers, downtime, and a dashboard. For solo adults the "Ignore for today" button turns the limit into a suggestion, which is the softness most PushUp Time users are escaping. The baseline everything else is measured against.

Pros

- + Free and already on every iPhone
- + OS-level integration and Family Sharing controls
- + No data leaves the device

Cons

- - "Ignore for today" bypasses the limit in two taps
- - No consequence and no exercise
- - Reports are quiet

[Visit Apple Screen Time](https://support.apple.com/en-us/108806) [ScreenFine vs Apple Screen Time](/compare/vs/apple-screen-time/)

#6 &middot; Best for: A physical lock instead of reps

## Brick

Hardware ~$60 + free app iOS

Brick is an NFC tile you tap to lock and unlock apps, swapping the workout for a physical ritual. The hardest to bypass here because it needs the tile present. The right step up if PushUp Time proved you need friction, but reps are not the friction that sticks for you.

Pros

- + Hardest to bypass when the tile is present
- + One hardware purchase, no subscription
- + Tactile, ritualistic interaction

Cons

- - Requires carrying the tile
- - $60 hardware cost up front
- - No fitness upside

[Visit Brick](https://www.getbrick.app/) [ScreenFine vs Brick](/compare/vs/brick/)

Common questions

## About PushUp Time alternatives

### Why look for a PushUp Time alternative?

Usually the free tier gets restrictive, or the per-unlock model stops interrupting you and you tap through the reps on autopilot, or you want a daily ceiling rather than paying a rep toll on each app open. The alternatives above address each: ScreenFine adds a hard daily cap and a redemption window, Pushscroll adds workout variety, StepBloc adds steps and a lifetime price.

### What is the cheapest PushUp Time alternative?

PushUp Time itself has a free tier, and Apple Screen Time is free but soft. Among paid options, StepBloc offers a one-time lifetime purchase, and ScreenFine is $1 per week (about $52 per year) with a 7-day trial. ScreenFine is the only one that adds a hard lock plus a 1-week redemption window instead of per-open reps.

### Which is the strictest?

ScreenFine is the most behaviourally strict on a normal iPhone: crossing your daily cap locks the apps with no override, redeemable only by verified exercise, steps, or mindful minutes within a week. Brick is the most physically strict because it needs the tile present. Pushscroll and StepBloc are roughly as strict as PushUp Time.

### Do any of these count reps with the camera like PushUp Time?

Yes. ScreenFine counts pushups and squats with the camera (on-device) and also accepts steps, a logged workout, or mindful minutes. Pushscroll uses pose detection across a wider set of exercises. StepBloc counts steps plus pushups and squats. All keep the camera processing on-device.

Keep comparing

## More alternatives roundups

[Apple Screen Time alternatives](/alternatives/apple-screen-time/)[Opal alternatives](/alternatives/opal/)[One Sec alternatives](/alternatives/one-sec/)[ScreenZen alternatives](/alternatives/screenzen/)[Brick alternatives](/alternatives/brick/)[StickK alternatives](/alternatives/stickk/)

## Compare ScreenFine head to head

Each alternative on this page has a one-on-one comparison with ScreenFine where applicable. Or browse all comparisons.

[Browse comparisons](/compare/) [Visit ScreenFine](/)