How Much Time Do You Waste Doom Scrolling Each Year?
Small habits compound. Here's how to put a real number on your annual scrolling time — and what to do about it.
Want to see your own number?
The Doom Scroll Cost Calculator takes about 30 seconds and shows you hours, workdays, and a dollar value.
Doom scrolling feels small. It isn't.
It starts with a quick check. Instagram for a minute while you wait for coffee. Twitter while you're in line. TikTok before bed — just a couple of videos. None of it feels significant in the moment. That's the problem.
Time is easy to underestimate when it comes in small chunks. But those 15-minute sessions stack up. And when you add them across a week, a month, a year, the total is usually uncomfortable to look at.
That's what this article is about: putting an honest number on it.
What actually counts as doom scrolling?
Doom scrolling isn't all screen time. It's a specific type: passive, compulsive, usually feed-based behavior that you didn't really choose. You didn't decide to watch that video — you just kept scrolling and it played. You didn't plan to spend 40 minutes on Reddit — you looked up and it happened.
It's different from watching a show you actually wanted to watch, working on your laptop, or video calling a friend. Those are intentional screen uses. Doom scrolling is the time you didn't decide to spend and probably don't feel great about afterward.
When you estimate your numbers below, only count the unintentional stuff. The mindless scrolling. That's what the calculator is built around.
Why minutes per day become days per year
Here's the math that surprises most people. Time compounds just like money — in reverse. Small daily losses become large annual costs.
If you scroll for 90 minutes a day, 7 days a week, that's 630 minutes per week. Over 52 weeks, that's 32,760 minutes, or 546 hours per year. Written out in days, it's about 22.8 full 24-hour days — or 68 eight-hour workdays.
That's more than three months of full-time work. Spent scrolling.
Example calculation
You're not alone
According to Harmony Healthcare IT screen time statistics, the average American adult spends 5 hours and 16 minutes per day on screens. That figure covers all screen use — not just doom scrolling — so it includes work, entertainment, and intentional use. Still, it's a useful baseline for how much total screen time most people carry.
If even a fraction of that total is passive, compulsive scrolling you didn't choose, the annual cost is significant. And most people, if they're honest, would say the fraction is bigger than they'd like.
What your time could be worth
The Doom Scroll Cost Calculator assigns a dollar value to your scrolling time using your hourly rate. We use $20/hour as a default because it gives people a concrete starting point. Your real number may be higher or lower — the point isn't precision, it's making the cost tangible.
At $20/hour, 547 hours of scrolling costs about $10,940 of time per year. At $40/hour, that same scrolling is $21,880. The hours are identical — the dollar value just reflects how you'd answer the question "what would I have done with that time instead?"
You don't have to accept $20/hour as your number. Change it to whatever reflects your actual situation. The calculator updates instantly.
What you could do with the time instead
547 hours is a lot of optionality. Here's what that same block of time could represent:
- About 78 books, reading at an average pace of 7 hours per book
- 547 one-hour workouts — more than enough to build a consistent fitness habit
- Five 100-hour skill-learning blocks — enough to become competent at something new, five times over
- 68 full nights of solid eight-hour sleep
None of this is meant to create guilt. It's just context. The tradeoff is real whether you name it or not.
How to cut back without deleting every app
You don't need to delete social media or go on a digital detox. Small reductions have real impact. Cutting 90 minutes/day down to 45 minutes reclaims about 273 hours per year. That's still 34 workdays back.
Here's what actually works for most people:
- Use your phone's app limits. iOS Screen Time and Android Digital Wellbeing both let you cap daily time on specific apps. The friction alone reduces use.
- Remove apps from your home screen. If you have to search for Instagram, you'll open it less. The habit often runs on autopilot — make autopilot harder.
- Set a hard evening cutoff. No scrolling after a certain time. It doesn't need to be dramatic — even 9 PM works for most people.
- Replace the habit, don't just suppress it. Scrolling often fills boredom or anxiety. Identify when you do it and have a specific replacement — a book, a walk, stretching, journaling.
- Try grayscale mode. It sounds strange but it works. Color makes feeds more compelling. Grayscale makes them less so.
- Keep your phone out of your bedroom. Late-night scrolling is one of the most common high-cost habits. Removing the phone removes the temptation.
Calculate what you're losing
Enter your daily scrolling estimate and see what it costs in hours, workdays, and dollars. Takes 30 seconds. No signup.
See your number