Honest comparison &middot; Reviewed June 23, 2026

# ScreenFine vs Jomo

Jomo is a well-built app blocker at about $30 per year (or $100 once) that blocks apps and sites by schedule or limit. ScreenFine charges $1 per week and, the moment you cross your daily total, hard-blocks your target apps until you complete 25 verified pushups, 1,000 steps, or 10 mindful minutes. Jomo is built around blocking rules. ScreenFine is built around a consequence you have to work off.

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

## Is ScreenFine a good Jomo alternative?

Shopping for a Jomo alternative? Here is the honest, no-spin
head-to-head. Jomo: A polished iOS screen-time blocker built on Apple's Screen Time API. Block apps, websites, and whole categories by schedule or daily limit, with Strict Mode, Apple Health integration, and accountability squads. ScreenFine
takes a different approach to the same problem. The comparison table below, and the
where-each-wins breakdown after it, show exactly where each tool pulls ahead and who
should switch.

Side by side

## ScreenFine vs Jomo

Feature
ScreenFine Jomo

Annual cost ~$52 / yr ($1/week) ~$30 / yr or $100 once

Lifetime purchase option

$99.99 one-time

Hard-block overage consequence 25 pushups / 15-min over

Blocks, no redemption

App + website + category blocking Per-app limits, apps only

Apps, sites, categories

Total-device daily cap The whole point

Per-app limits + schedules

Scheduled blocks / Strict Mode

A core feature

AI personality / roast notification Six villains

Public accountability Wall of Shame + partner mode

Squads

Apple Health integration Steps + workouts redeem fines

Habit tracking

Best for People who want a consequence with skin in the game People who want flexible, granular blocking rules

Last fact-checked June 23, 2026.
[See Jomo for yourself](https://jomo.so/).

Where ScreenFine wins

- ### A consequence, not just a wall Jomo blocks the app. When the schedule or limit lifts, you scroll again with nothing owed. ScreenFine turns the overage into a debt: 25 pushups per 15-minute block, verified by camera or HealthKit, before the apps unlock. The cost is the redemption itself. Loss aversion (Kahneman, Tversky) is roughly twice as motivating as a soft block you can wait out.
- ### One daily number, not a rule tree Jomo is powerful but configuration-heavy: per-app limits, schedules, categories, Strict Mode windows. ScreenFine puts a single number on your whole day. Say, 90 minutes. Cross it in any app and your targets lock. There is one decision to make, not a settings tree to maintain.
- ### Personality you actually read Every ScreenFine lock fires a personalised roast from one of six AI villains. The Banker, the Reaper, the Coach, the Ex, the Algorithm, or New Year You. Jomo sends standard system notifications. Roast notifications get read; system banners get swiped away.
- ### Public accountability built in ScreenFine posts slips to a Wall of Shame and links a partner who sees your streaks and fines. Jomo has squads, but the accountability is softer. Knowing a specific person will see the slip is a stronger deterrent than a leaderboard.

Where Jomo wins

- ### Cheaper, with a lifetime option Jomo is about $30 per year, and a one-time $99.99 purchase buys it outright. If you want to pay once and never see a subscription again, ScreenFine has no lifetime tier. Its model is the recurring $1 weekly charge, which is the point, but Jomo is the better fit if a subscription itself is the dealbreaker.
- ### Granular blocking and websites Jomo blocks specific apps, whole categories, and websites, with schedules and Strict Mode windows. ScreenFine is app-only on the device and has no Safari domain blocking. If you need fine-grained control over exactly what is blocked and when, Jomo is more capable today.
- ### Mature, deep app Jomo has been refined over years and shows it. The onboarding, the rule editor, and the reports are more developed than ScreenFine's. If a deep settings UI matters to you, Jomo is ahead.
- ### A real free experience to try Jomo lets you do meaningful blocking before paying. ScreenFine has a 7-day trial and then requires a payment method, because the fine mechanism does not work without one.

## Pick ScreenFine if

- + You have already tried rule-based blockers and learned to wait out or disable the block.
- + You want a single daily phone-use number with a real consequence for crossing it.
- + You believe a verified-exercise lock will move you more than a scheduled block.
- + You want public accountability (Wall of Shame, partner mode), not just a private squad.

## Pick Jomo if

- + You want granular control over which apps, sites, and categories are blocked and when.
- + You would rather pay once ($99.99) than carry a subscription.
- + You want website blocking in Safari, not just apps.
- + A scheduled-block model already works for you and you only want it cheaper.

via schemas[]) --> Common questions

## About ScreenFine vs Jomo

### Is ScreenFine a good Jomo alternative?

If Jomo's blocking works for you, it is hard to beat on price. People switch to ScreenFine when the blocks stop working. They learn to wait out the schedule or toggle Strict Mode off. ScreenFine's verified-exercise lock has no override, so there is nothing to wait out or disable.

### Can I use Jomo and ScreenFine together?

Yes. They run independently through Apple's Screen Time API and do not conflict. Some users keep Jomo's scheduled blocks for work hours and run ScreenFine's daily fine across the whole day.

### Which is cheaper, Jomo or ScreenFine?

Jomo is cheaper annually (about $30 per year, or $99.99 once) versus ScreenFine at $1 per week (about $52 per year). ScreenFine's weekly billing is deliberate: a recurring charge you feel is part of the accountability, not an accident of pricing.

### Does ScreenFine block websites like Jomo?

No. ScreenFine is app-only on the device and does not block Safari domains. Jomo can block specific websites. If web reading is your main problem rather than apps, Jomo handles that and ScreenFine does not.

## Compare ScreenFine with other tools

- [See the full Brick comparison](/compare/vs/brick/)
- [See the full Freedom comparison](/compare/vs/freedom/)
- [See the full Cold Turkey comparison](/compare/vs/cold-turkey/)
- [See the full Opal comparison](/compare/vs/opal/)
- [See the full Apple Screen Time comparison](/compare/vs/apple-screen-time/)
- [See the full One Sec comparison](/compare/vs/one-sec/)
- [See the full ScreenZen comparison](/compare/vs/screenzen/)

## Related reading

- [Commitment devices: the mechanism behind verified-exercise locks](/guides/commitment-devices/)
- [How to reduce screen time: a 5-step plan](/guides/how-to-reduce-screen-time/)
- [How the fine jar works](/features/fine-jar/)
- [AI villain: the consequence delivery layer](/features/ai-villain/)
- [Screen Time Cost Index 2026 (data report)](/data/screen-time-cost-index-2026/)
- [Jomo alternatives roundup](/alternatives/jomo/)

## Ready to put real exercise on the line?

$1 per week via Apple IAP. 25 pushups per 15-minute overage block. No variable charges.

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