Honest comparison · Reviewed May 8, 2026
ScreenFine vs Apple Screen Time
Apple Screen Time is free, deeply integrated, and the right baseline for kids using Family Sharing. For solo adults it has a fatal flaw: the limit screen has an "Ignore for today" button. Two taps and the consequence is gone. ScreenFine has no override. 25 pushups per 15-minute block over your daily limit, and the apps stay locked until you do them. $1/week subscription, no variable charges.
Side by side
ScreenFine vs Apple Screen Time
| Feature | ScreenFine | Apple Screen Time |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | $1 / week | Free |
| Built into iOS | App Store install | Since iOS 12 |
| Hard-block overage consequence | 25 pushups per 15-min overage | "Ignore for today" button |
| Override button at the limit | No way to bypass | "Ignore for today" present |
| Per-app limits | Pro tier | |
| Total-device daily cap | Drives the locks | Downtime windows |
| Family Sharing / kids | Adults only | Strong for kids |
| Personalised consequence | AI villain roast | Beige system banner |
| Weekly report | AI insights | Static breakdown |
| Best for | Adults who bypass their own limits | Kids on Family Sharing; adults who genuinely respect a soft warning |
Last fact-checked May 8, 2026. See Apple Screen Time for yourself .
Where ScreenFine wins
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No "Ignore for today" button
Apple Screen Time's limit screen has a button labelled "Ignore for today." Tapping it dismisses the limit until midnight. For an adult who has installed Screen Time on their own device, that button is a release valve. And the muscle memory to tap it forms within a week. ScreenFine has no override. The fine fires the moment you cross the limit. There is no negotiating in the moment.
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A real consequence, not a banner
Apple Screen Time's consequence is a beige system notification. ScreenFine's consequence is a 25-pushup lock plus a personalised roast notification from one of six AI villain personas. The villain remembers what app, what time, what running total. Loss aversion (Kahneman/Tversky) is roughly twice as motivating as gain framing. A banner is a gain frame, a charge is a loss frame.
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Weekly billing keeps the cost visible
Apple Screen Time has no cost tied to your behaviour. ScreenFine surfaces a weekly lock log showing how many overage events fired and which apps triggered them. The lock count is dated, itemised, and visible in-app. That visibility is part of the mechanism. You cannot pretend the limit was honoured if the log says otherwise.
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Behavioural redemption built in
Each ScreenFine fine is pending for 1 week. You can clear it by walking 1,000 steps, doing a workout, ten mindful minutes, or 25 camera-counted pushups. Apple Screen Time does not offer any path back from an overage. You just kept scrolling, and that is that.
Where Apple Screen Time wins
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Free and already on every iPhone
No install, no account, no subscription. If your screen-time problem is mild and a soft nudge is genuinely enough, Apple Screen Time costs nothing and works fine. ScreenFine costs $1/week, no variable charges.
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Best-in-class for parents
Family Sharing lets a parent set Screen Time on a child's device with a real passcode the child cannot bypass. ScreenFine is for solo adults; it does not have parental-control features and does not try to.
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OS-level enforcement
Because Apple Screen Time is built into iOS, Apple can dim the icon and put up a system-level limit screen no third-party app can perfectly match. ScreenFine uses the same FamilyControls and DeviceActivityMonitor APIs Apple provides for parental controls, but the depth of integration is Apple's.
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No data leaves your device
Apple Screen Time's usage data stays on-device. ScreenFine sends fine events to a Convex backend (necessary for the billing engine and the AI villain roasts) but does not store raw app-usage minutes. If you want zero off-device data, Apple Screen Time is the answer.
Pick ScreenFine if
- + You have set Apple Screen Time limits and tapped "Ignore for today" more than once.
- + You are an adult on your own device, and the soft nudge has stopped working for you.
- + You want a real consequence, not just a notification.
- + You believe loss aversion will work on you better than a beige system banner.
- + You want a single daily phone-use number with a financial penalty for crossing it.
Pick Apple Screen Time if
- + You are setting up Screen Time for a kid via Family Sharing. This is the right tool for that job.
- + You genuinely respect soft warnings and do not bypass them.
- + You want zero usage data leaving your device.
- + You do not want to pay for screen-time enforcement, and a free, soft nudge is enough for you.
Common questions
About ScreenFine vs Apple Screen Time
Does ScreenFine replace Apple Screen Time?
No. The two run side-by-side. Apple Screen Time provides the underlying usage tracking (via the FamilyControls / DeviceActivityMonitor APIs); ScreenFine reads that data and adds the fine layer on top. You can keep your existing Apple Screen Time limits in place if you want a soft nudge before the hard fine.
Why does Apple have an "Ignore for today" button?
Because Apple Screen Time was designed to be useful for both kids (with parental override impossible via Family Sharing) and solo adults (who Apple did not want to lock out of their own devices). For solo adults the override turns the limit into a suggestion. ScreenFine intentionally has no equivalent button. The consequence is what makes the mechanism work.
Can I use ScreenFine on a kid's device?
No. ScreenFine is for adults who consent to a self-imposed financial penalty. Setting it up on a child's device is not what the product is for, and the payment requirement makes it impractical regardless. For kids, use Apple Screen Time with Family Sharing.
Does ScreenFine see my usage data?
ScreenFine reads your screen-time data via Apple's FamilyControls APIs (the same APIs Apple uses for parental controls) and sends fine events to our Convex backend. The backend stores fine records (amount, app name unless private, time) but not raw minute-by-minute usage logs. See the privacy policy for the full picture.
Related reading
Ready to put real exercise on the line?
$1 per week via Apple IAP. 25 pushups per 15-minute overage block. No variable charges.