How Apple Screen Time App Blocking Works
Apple Screen Time is the iPhone system that reports usage and supports app limits, downtime, restrictions, and app selection. Third-party blockers can use Apple's permission flow to help manage selected apps.
How does Apple Screen Time app blocking work?
Apple Screen Time is the iPhone system that reports usage and supports app limits, downtime, restrictions, and app selection. Third-party blockers can use Apple's permission flow to help manage selected apps.
- Screen Time is Apple's built-in system for usage reports, app limits, downtime, and restrictions.
- App blockers rely on iOS permission and app selection flows.
- If the app picker freezes or behaves strangely, it may be an iOS-level Screen Time issue.
How do you set it up step by step?
- 1Open Screen Time settings and confirm Screen Time is enabled.
- 2Review App Limits and Downtime if you use Apple's built-in controls.
- 3When using Achieve, grant the requested Screen Time permission.
- 4Select the apps, categories, or websites you want Achieve to manage.
- 5If selection fails, close open categories, try search carefully, and see the troubleshooting guide.
Earn your screen time with Achieve
Block distracting iPhone apps until you complete daily goals, workouts, or productive tasks.
What does Apple Screen Time control?
Screen Time can show how long you use apps and websites, set app limits, schedule downtime, and restrict selected content or purchases. It is the foundation for many iPhone screen time workflows.
Dedicated blockers build on that foundation by giving you a more specific routine around what to block and when access should return.
Why do Screen Time permissions matter?
Apps like Achieve need permission before they can help manage selected distractions. Without permission, the app cannot reliably apply your blocking rules.
The app selection interface is controlled by iOS. If it freezes or crashes while selecting categories or websites, the issue may be in Apple's Screen Time picker rather than your content list.
How does Achieve help?
Achieve uses the Screen Time permission flow so you can choose distracting apps and connect them to your goals. Once configured, the goal is simple: finish what matters, then unlock access.
If you run into app picker problems, use the Achieve app picker troubleshooting guide for practical workarounds.
What does this look like in practice?
Use Screen Time as the permission layer
Apple controls which apps and categories can be selected. Dedicated blockers build routines on top of that permission, but the picker itself is still iOS-controlled.
Keep essential tools available
Do not block apps you need for maps, banking, two-factor codes, work messages, or emergency contact unless you have a safe fallback.
When might this not be enough?
- Screen Time settings can be confusing because app limits, downtime, content restrictions, and third-party permissions are separate concepts.
- If the iOS app picker freezes or crashes, the best next step is troubleshooting the picker flow, not rewriting your whole blocking setup.
Frequently asked questions
Does Achieve need Screen Time permission?
Yes. Achieve needs Screen Time permission to help manage the apps, categories, and websites you select.
Why can the app picker freeze?
The picker is controlled by iOS. Some category and website selection flows can freeze or crash, especially when many categories are open.
Where can I troubleshoot picker issues?
Use the Achieve app picker troubleshooting page for steps to try before contacting support.
Earn your screen time with Achieve
Block distracting iPhone apps until you complete daily goals, workouts, or productive tasks.