How to limit screen time for kids
Most parents know their kids have too much screen time. Most parents also know that just saying 'no more screens' creates a war. Both things are true. Here's what I've learned: screen time limits don't work by being strict. They work by replacing screens with things that satisfy the same needs — entertainment, social connection, mastery, downtime. A kid who has nothing to do except be bored will always find the screen. A kid with other options can choose differently. The other piece: not all screen time is equal. Educational screen time, video calls with grandparents, creative tools (Minecraft, drawing apps, coding) — these are different from passive consumption. Treating them all the same makes the rules feel arbitrary and gets resistance. Here's the actual approach that creates sustainable limits without constant conflict.
Set clear limits upfront, not in the moment
The worst time to set a screen time limit is when they're asking for more. They're already upset, you're already tense. The limit will be contested.
Set limits when everyone's calm. Talk about it as a family. Explain why (sleep, other activities, family time). Let them have input on specifics (which shows, what time of day, weekend vs weekday).
A good framework:
- Weekday limit: 1-2 hours of recreational screen time
- Weekend limit: 2-3 hours of recreational screen time
- No screens during meals (family rule)
- No screens 1 hour before bed (sleep rule)
- Educational and creative screen use doesn't count toward the limit
Once the rule is set, you enforce it calmly and consistently. They already knew the rule. You're not making it up on the spot.
The biggest mistake: setting a rule that you don't follow through on. They'll learn 'if I argue long enough, the rule changes.' Then you're negotiating every day forever.
Make screens inconvenient — by design
One of the most effective screen time strategies: don't make screens the easiest option. Kids default to whatever's easiest. If the iPad is on the kitchen counter and the LEGO is in the basement, iPad wins.
Make the alternatives easier:
- Art supplies accessible at kid height
- Sports equipment in the garage, ready to go
- Board games in the living room, not the closet
- A reading nook with books at their level
- Outside toys in the backyard (trampoline, balls, chalk)
Make screens slightly less convenient:
- Charge devices in the parents' room at night
- Use parental controls for time limits (built into iOS, Android, and routers)
- Don't allow screens in bedrooms
- Have a 'phone parking lot' by the door where devices go during meals
You don't have to be a tyrant about it. You just have to make the easier choice the better choice.
Replace what screens provide — don't just remove them
Kids use screens to fill specific needs:
- Boredom → need engaging activities
- Loneliness → need social connection
- Stress → need a way to decompress
- Curiosity → need interesting things to explore
- Mastery → need challenges they can work on
- Rest → need true downtime
If you just remove screens without addressing these needs, they'll fight you on it AND find other ways to fill the gap (often in unhealthy ways).
The replacement menu:
- Boredom: art supplies, building toys, audiobooks, puzzles, outdoor exploration
- Loneliness: playdates, sibling time, time with you
- Stress: roughhousing, snuggling, breathing exercises, drawing
- Curiosity: books, museums, documentaries (yes, more screens, but together), nature
- Mastery: instrument practice, coding projects, sports, cooking
- Rest: quiet time with books, music, lying on the floor doing nothing
This isn't a perfect 1:1 swap, but it gets closer. And it gives them something to do besides 'be bored and want the screen.'
Watch screens with them — co-view, don't just co-exist
The research is clear: passive, unsupervised screen time is worse than co-viewed screen time. When you watch with them, you:
- Get to talk about what they're seeing
- Help them process what they're watching
- Make it a shared experience
- Model healthy media consumption
- Notice when content is too much
Co-viewing doesn't have to be every minute. Even 20 minutes of watching together, then asking questions, makes a difference.
For younger kids: co-view everything. Talk about what's happening. Ask 'how do you think she feels?' 'what would you do?'
For older kids: watch some things together, give them autonomy for others, but stay engaged with what they're watching. Ask about the show. Be interested.
Also: choose what they watch. Age-appropriate content matters. The YouTube algorithm isn't designed for kids — it'll take them to weirder places fast. Curate.
Don't use screens as a reward or punishment
When screens become a reward, they become the most valuable thing in the house. 'If you eat your dinner, you can watch TV.' Now dinner is the obstacle to TV, and TV is what they actually want.
When screens become a punishment, you're teaching that screens are bad. But you're also using them as leverage, which means they must be valuable. Kids internalize the contradiction.
Better approach:
- Don't promise screens as a reward
- Don't threaten to take them away as a punishment
- Treat screens as one of many normal activities (like playing outside, reading, eating)
- The limit is the limit, regardless of behavior
If your kid had a hard day at school and you want to be lenient with the limit — fine. But don't make it a transactional thing. Just be flexible because you're a flexible parent, not because they earned it.
This is harder in practice than it sounds. Most of us fall into the reward/punishment pattern. Catch yourself when you do.
Model the behavior you want to see
If you're on your phone scrolling while telling your kid to put theirs down, the message is: 'Rules are for you, not me.' That's not a sustainable model.
Look at your own screen use. Are you:
- On your phone during meals?
- Scrolling first thing in the morning?
- Checking your phone mid-conversation?
- Using screens to avoid your own boredom or stress?
If yes to any of these, you're modeling exactly what you're trying to prevent.
This doesn't mean you have to give up screens. Adults need them too. But model the behavior:
- Phone in another room during meals
- 30 minutes after work before checking email
- Designated 'screen-free' times (bedtime, weekend mornings)
- Actually present when your kids are talking to you
When kids see that you can put your phone down and be present, they learn it's possible. When they see you always on your phone, they learn screens are inescapable and always-on.
Citations & External Resources
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Frequently Asked Questions
How to limit screen time for kids?
Screen time limits work better when you replace what you're removing. Here's the actual plan that doesn't make you the screen police. For more practical tips, check out our guide on How to choose the right school for your child.
What is the best way to limit screen time for kids?
The best way to limit screen time for kids is to follow a systematic step-by-step approach. Most parents know their kids have too much screen time. Most parents also know that just saying 'no more screens' creates a war. Both things are true. Here's what I've learned: screen time limits... You might also find our guide on How to choose the right school for your child helpful.
How long does it take to limit screen time for kids?
Most people can limit screen time for kids within 7 minutes of consistent practice. The exact timeline depends on your starting point and how diligently you follow the steps in this guide. For more help, read our related guide: How to choose the right school for your child.