ScreenFine

ScreenFine vs StayFocusd

StayFocusd is a free Chrome extension that limits time on distracting websites and supports a whitelist-based "nuclear option." It is desktop-Chrome-only and does not touch your phone at all. ScreenFine is iOS-only with a daily total cap and verified-exercise redemption on overage. They do not compete: StayFocusd handles browser-based distraction on a laptop, ScreenFine handles iPhone overuse.

Is ScreenFine a good StayFocusd alternative?

Shopping for a StayFocusd alternative? Here is the honest, no-spin head-to-head. StayFocusd: A free Chrome extension that limits time on distracting websites and supports a whitelist-based "nuclear option" for total focus. 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.

ScreenFine vs StayFocusd

Feature ScreenFine StayFocusd
Platform iOS only Chrome extension (desktop only)
Pricing $1/week (~$52/yr) Free
Mobile coverage
iOS only
No mobile at all
App blocking (not just web)
FamilyControls + shield
Websites only
Website blocking
The whole product
Whitelist mode (Nuclear Option)
Strongest mode
Daily total cap with consequence
Verified-exercise lock
Time budget per site
Bypass difficulty
Cost on overage
Other browsers bypass it
Behavioural redemption window
1 week per fine
AI personalised consequence
Six villain personas
Public accountability
Wall of Shame, partner mode
Best for iPhone overuse with real consequence Browser-only distraction on Chrome

Last fact-checked May 16, 2026. See StayFocusd for yourself .

Where ScreenFine wins

  • Mobile coverage

    StayFocusd is a Chrome extension. It has no mobile app, no iOS coverage, and no Android coverage. If your problem is your iPhone, StayFocusd does literally nothing. ScreenFine is built directly on Apple's FamilyControls and ManagedSettings APIs and shields target apps at the OS level on iOS.

  • A real consequence on overage

    StayFocusd is a soft limit on websites: once you hit the time budget, the site shows a "Shouldn't you be working?" message and blocks further access in Chrome until tomorrow. You can switch browsers in three seconds and bypass it. ScreenFine's overage triggers an OS-level shield on selected apps and an accruing fine. The bypass cost is higher because the block is OS-native and the consequence is verified exercise.

  • Behavioural redemption window

    StayFocusd has no recovery path: either you stay under your time budget on that site that day or you do not. ScreenFine's 1-week redemption window means a slip-up has a healthy-behaviour clearing path (1,000 steps, a workout, 10 mindful minutes, 25 pushups). The lock becomes a prompt for exercise rather than a static daily block.

  • Personalised, in-the-moment consequence

    StayFocusd shows the same fixed message to everyone. ScreenFine fires a personalised AI villain notification at the moment of overage, written in one of six character voices (The Banker, the Reaper, the Coach, the Ex, the Algorithm, New Year You). Roasts are remembered; generic banners are tuned out.

Where StayFocusd wins

  • Completely free

    StayFocusd is free with no paid tier. ScreenFine is $1/week. For a user whose distraction problem is genuinely just specific websites in Chrome on a laptop, StayFocusd is free and adequate. No reason to pay anything.

  • Mature, simple, and battle-tested

    StayFocusd has been a beloved Chrome extension for over a decade with millions of users. The settings UI is straightforward, the whitelist (Nuclear Option) mode genuinely works, and you can be set up in under five minutes. ScreenFine is much newer and more complex by design.

  • Nuclear Option whitelist is genuinely strict

    StayFocusd's Nuclear Option lets you whitelist only a small set of allowed sites and block everything else, with no bypass via the extension settings during the active block. For users whose problem is browser-based distraction on a single Chrome profile, this is one of the strongest blocking modes available.

  • Right tool for browser-only problems

    If your distraction problem is genuinely "I keep opening 10 news tabs at work in Chrome on my laptop," StayFocusd handles that directly and ScreenFine handles none of it. The right tool depends on the surface where your distraction lives. Choose by surface, not by feature count.

Pick ScreenFine if

  • + Your problem is your iPhone, not Chrome on your laptop
  • + You need OS-level app blocking, not just website blocking
  • + You want a real consequence (verified exercise or financial accrual) on overage
  • + You want a 1-week behavioural redemption window for slip-ups
  • + You want public accountability via Wall of Shame or partner mode

Pick StayFocusd if

  • + Your distraction problem lives entirely in Chrome on a laptop
  • + You want a free tool with no subscription
  • + You want a whitelist-only (Nuclear Option) mode to allow a small set of sites and block everything else
  • + You are not ready for a financial or exercise consequence
  • + You do not have an iPhone or your phone is not the problem

About ScreenFine vs StayFocusd

Is ScreenFine a StayFocusd alternative?

Only if you have decided the real distraction surface is your phone, not your browser. StayFocusd handles Chrome-based website distraction well and ScreenFine does not touch the browser at all. If both surfaces are distractions for you, the right answer is to run both, not pick one.

Can I use StayFocusd and ScreenFine together?

Yes. They cover different platforms entirely. StayFocusd blocks websites in Chrome on your laptop. ScreenFine puts a daily total cap on your iPhone with verified-exercise redemption on overage. The two do not conflict in any way.

Does StayFocusd work on mobile?

No. StayFocusd is a Chrome desktop extension. It has no mobile app, no iOS support, and no Android support. Mobile Chrome on iOS and Android does not support StayFocusd extensions either. For mobile-side enforcement on iPhone you need a separate tool like Apple Screen Time or ScreenFine.

What is StayFocusd's Nuclear Option?

A whitelist mode that allows only a small set of explicitly chosen sites and blocks everything else for a defined period (often the rest of the work day). It is one of the stricter modes available in a free browser extension because the bypass during an active Nuclear Option period is genuinely difficult. The trade-off is that you have to commit to the whitelist before starting.

Compare ScreenFine with other tools

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.