Doomscrolling effects include increased anxiety, depression, sleep disruption, and emotional exhaustion caused by compulsive consumption of negative news, but evidence-based strategies like cognitive behavioral therapy and mindfulness-based interventions can help break these harmful patterns and restore mental wellbeing.
Why do you keep scrolling through depressing headlines at 2 a.m., even though you know it makes you feel terrible? Understanding the doomscrolling effects on your mental health is the first step toward breaking free from this cycle without guilt.

In this Article
What is doomscrolling?
You’re lying in bed, phone in hand, thumb moving almost on autopilot. One headline leads to another: a climate report, a political crisis, footage of a natural disaster halfway across the world. You feel worse with every swipe, yet you keep going. That’s doomscrolling.
Doomscrolling is the compulsive consumption of negative news or distressing content, even when it causes emotional harm. It’s not just spending too much time online. It’s specifically seeking out, or getting pulled into, content that leaves you feeling anxious, hopeless, or overwhelmed.
The term gained widespread use during the COVID-19 pandemic, when millions found themselves glued to case counts and mortality statistics late into the night. But the behavior itself isn’t new. People have always been drawn to alarming information, whether through 24-hour cable news cycles or refreshing websites after major events. The smartphone simply made it possible to do this anywhere, anytime, including at 2 a.m. when you should be sleeping.
Doomscrolling vs. mindless scrolling
Not all excessive phone use is doomscrolling. Mindless scrolling might involve passively watching cooking videos, scrolling through vacation photos, or losing an hour to random entertainment. You might feel unproductive afterward, but not necessarily distressed.
Doomscrolling is different because the content itself is emotionally heavy. The key distinction is how you feel during and after. Examples include refreshing election results obsessively despite rising anxiety, watching disaster footage on loop, reading comment sections full of conflict, or diving deep into threads about economic collapse. You recognize the content is upsetting you, yet something keeps you scrolling.
If you’ve ever put down your phone feeling drained, angry, or scared after a late-night news spiral, you’ve experienced doomscrolling firsthand.
Why doomscrolling is so hard to stop
If you’ve ever told yourself “just five more minutes” only to look up an hour later, you’re not dealing with a willpower problem. You’re up against a combination of ancient brain wiring and modern technology specifically designed to keep you scrolling. Understanding why doomscrolling is so addictive can help you approach the habit with self-compassion rather than self-criticism.
The dopamine-uncertainty loop
Your brain releases dopamine not when you get a reward, but when you anticipate one. Social media exploits this through what psychologists call variable reward schedules, the same mechanism that makes slot machines so compelling. You never know if the next scroll will bring breaking news, a viral post, or something that finally explains what’s happening in the world.
This unpredictability keeps your brain searching for the next update, releasing small hits of dopamine along the way. The content doesn’t even need to be positive. Novel information of any kind can trigger this response, which is why you keep scrolling through distressing headlines.
Your brain is wired for bad news
Humans evolved to pay closer attention to threats than rewards. A rustling bush might be the wind, but treating it as a predator kept our ancestors alive. This negativity bias served us well for thousands of years, but social media algorithms have learned to exploit it. Negative content generates stronger emotional reactions, more comments, and more shares. Platforms prioritize engagement over your wellbeing, so threatening or outrage-inducing posts rise to the top of your feed.
You’re not weak for getting pulled in. You’re responding exactly as your brain was designed to respond to perceived danger.
The illusion of staying informed
Doomscrolling often feels productive. You tell yourself you’re staying informed, preparing for what might happen, or keeping up with events that matter. This creates an illusion of control: if you just read enough, you’ll be ready for whatever comes next. But consuming endless streams of distressing content rarely leads to meaningful action. Instead, it tends to increase anxiety while providing no real preparation or protection.
Compulsion versus addiction
While doomscrolling shares features with behavioral addictions, including compulsive use despite negative consequences, it’s not identical to substance addiction. There’s no physical dependence or withdrawal in the traditional sense. Still, the patterns are real: the urge to check your phone, the difficulty stopping once you start, the way time seems to disappear. Acknowledging these compulsive patterns doesn’t mean labeling yourself an addict. It means recognizing that you’re working against powerful psychological forces, and that breaking free requires strategy, not just determination.
How doomscrolling affects your mental health
When you consume negative news continuously, your nervous system doesn’t distinguish between reading about a disaster and experiencing one firsthand. Your brain processes each alarming headline as a potential danger, triggering stress responses that were designed to help us survive actual threats. Research shows that this behavior can significantly increase psychological distress, affecting everything from your emotional state to your physical health and relationships.
Anxiety, stress, and hypervigilance
Constant exposure to threatening content keeps your fight-or-flight system perpetually activated. Your brain becomes hypervigilant, scanning for danger even when you’ve put your phone down. This state of chronic alertness manifests as racing thoughts, difficulty relaxing, and a persistent sense that something bad is about to happen.
Many people who doomscroll regularly notice their anxiety symptoms intensifying over time. You might feel your heart rate spike when notifications appear, or experience a low-grade nervousness that follows you throughout the day. The cruel irony is that the scrolling you do to feel prepared actually leaves you feeling more anxious and less capable of handling real challenges.
Depression and emotional exhaustion
When your feed consists primarily of suffering, conflict, and catastrophe, hopelessness starts to feel rational. Your brain begins to believe that the world is nothing but pain and problems, which can contribute to depression and a sense that nothing you do matters.
Emotional exhaustion sets in when you’ve spent your mental energy absorbing everyone else’s crises. You may find yourself feeling numb, irritable, or emotionally unavailable to the people around you. Partners and family members often notice this first: you’re physically present but mentally elsewhere, too drained to engage meaningfully.
Sleep and physical health impacts
Scrolling before bed creates a perfect storm for poor sleep. The blue light from your screen suppresses melatonin production, but the content itself poses an even bigger problem. Reading about crises and conflicts activates your stress response right when your body should be winding down. Studies confirm that in-bed social media use is associated with insomnia, creating a cycle where poor sleep makes you more vulnerable to anxiety, which leads to more scrolling.
Elevated cortisol levels from chronic stress can cause muscle tension, headaches, and digestive issues. Many people also notice their attention span shrinking: tasks that require sustained focus become harder because the brain has adapted to the rapid-fire stimulation of scrolling.
Signs you might be doomscrolling
Recognizing doomscrolling in yourself can be tricky because it often feels like you’re just staying informed. But there’s a difference between catching up on news and falling into a pattern that leaves you feeling drained. Here are some signs that your scrolling has crossed into problematic territory.
Time distortion is one of the clearest red flags. You pick up your phone to check one notification, and suddenly an hour has vanished. That lost-time feeling signals that you’ve slipped into autopilot mode.
Emotional decline is another major indicator. Research shows that doomscrolling is associated with higher levels of psychological distress, and many people report feeling anxious, sad, or hopeless after scrolling. The paradox: you feel worse after scrolling, yet you keep doing it anyway.
Compulsive checking behaviors reveal how deeply the habit has taken hold. This looks like reaching for your phone before your feet hit the floor in the morning, scrolling during meals, or finding yourself wide awake at 3 a.m. reading about the latest crisis.
Relationship friction often emerges when others notice what you can’t see. A partner mentioning how often you’re on your phone, or children competing with a screen for your attention, can be uncomfortable wake-up calls.
Physical symptoms round out the picture. You might feel exhausted yet unable to relax, notice tension in your shoulders and neck, or struggle to fall asleep even when you’re tired.
The most telling sign? Continuing to scroll despite knowing it makes you feel bad. That disconnect between awareness and action is the hallmark of a habit that has taken control.
The 12-Point Doomscrolling Severity Assessment
Understanding where you fall on the spectrum can help you determine the right level of response. Answer each question honestly based on your behavior over the past two weeks.
Rate each statement from 0 to 3:
- 0 = Never or rarely
- 1 = Sometimes (a few times per week)
- 2 = Often (daily)
- 3 = Almost always (multiple times daily)
- I scroll through negative news or social media content for longer than I originally intended.
- I feel unable to stop scrolling even when I want to put my phone down.
- My mood is noticeably worse after a scrolling session than before I started.
- I scroll through distressing content within 30 minutes of waking up or before falling asleep.
- I’ve neglected responsibilities like work, chores, or appointments because I was scrolling.
- I experience physical symptoms during or after scrolling, such as tension headaches, eye strain, or a racing heart.
- I reach for my phone to scroll when I feel anxious, bored, or emotionally uncomfortable.
- My sleep quality has suffered because of late-night scrolling or racing thoughts about content I’ve seen.
- People close to me have commented on or expressed concern about my phone use.
- I’ve missed out on in-person social activities or conversations because I was scrolling.
- I feel a sense of dread or compulsion to stay informed even when the content upsets me.
- I’ve tried to cut back on scrolling but found it difficult to maintain those limits.
Add up your total score (0–36 possible).
Scoring guide: what your results mean
Level 1: Mild (0–9 points)
Your scrolling habits are relatively balanced. Simple awareness strategies and basic boundaries, like setting app timers, should be enough to keep things in check.
Level 2: Moderate (10–18 points)
You’re experiencing regular doomscrolling patterns that affect your mood and daily life. Structured digital boundaries and intentional habit replacement techniques will likely help you regain control.
Level 3: Significant (19–27 points)
Doomscrolling has become a daily habit with noticeable impacts on your emotional wellbeing, sleep, or relationships. Consider combining self-help strategies with support from a mental health professional who can address underlying anxiety or stress patterns.
Level 4: Severe (28–36 points)
Your scrolling behavior shows signs of compulsive use that significantly interferes with your functioning and quality of life. Professional support is strongly recommended to address both the behavior itself and any co-occurring anxiety or depression symptoms.
If your score suggests professional support could help, you can take a free assessment with ReachLink to explore your options at your own pace, with no commitment required. Our care coordinators can match you with a licensed therapist who understands digital wellness challenges.
How to actually stop doomscrolling
Knowing the effects of doomscrolling on mental health is one thing. Actually putting your phone down is another. The good news? You don’t need superhuman willpower. You need smarter systems. The strategies below target the root of the problem: your environment, your habits, and the automatic nature of reaching for your phone.
Set up your environment for success
Willpower is a limited resource, and it drains faster than you think. Instead of relying on self-control in the moment, design your surroundings to make doomscrolling harder to start.
Start by charging your phone outside your bedroom. This single change eliminates late-night scrolling and the morning reflex to check the news before your feet hit the floor. If you need an alarm, a basic alarm clock works just fine.
Next, create friction between you and the apps that pull you in. Delete social media apps from your phone entirely, or at minimum, move them off your home screen and into a folder several swipes away. Every extra tap is a moment to reconsider. You can also try grayscale mode, which strips away the colorful notifications and thumbnails designed to grab your attention. Screen time limits can help too, but only if you treat them as a hard stop rather than a suggestion.
Create time boundaries that actually work
Unlimited access to news creates unlimited opportunities to spiral. Schedule specific times to check in with current events, ideally no more than twice a day. Morning and early evening work well for most people. Outside those windows, the news is off-limits.
Set a hard cutoff at night, at least one to two hours before bed. Your brain needs time to decompress, and consuming distressing content right before sleep makes that nearly impossible. Put your phone in another room after your cutoff, or use a timed lockbox if you need extra accountability.
Tell someone about your boundaries. When you share your goals with a friend, partner, or family member, you create social accountability that makes it easier to stick with your limits.
Replace the scroll with something better
Breaking a habit is hard. Replacing it with something else is much easier. When the urge to scroll hits, you need a go-to alternative ready. Physical movement works well: a quick walk, some stretches, or even just standing up and looking out a window. These actions interrupt the automatic reach for your phone and give your nervous system something different to do.
Techniques from mindfulness-based stress reduction can also help. When you notice the impulse to scroll, pause. Take three slow breaths. Ask yourself what you’re actually looking for: connection, distraction, a sense of control? Often, naming the need helps it pass.
If you want to stay on your phone, consider swapping what you consume. Research shows that engaging with positive content doesn’t carry the same emotional toll as doomscrolling. Following accounts that share uplifting stories, humor, or creative work can satisfy the urge to scroll without the mental health cost.
For deeper habit change, cognitive behavioral therapy offers structured tools to identify triggers, challenge automatic thoughts, and build healthier patterns over time. A therapist can help you understand why you scroll and develop personalized strategies that stick.
Platform-by-platform algorithm reset guide
Every social media platform learns from your behavior. When you pause on a post, like it, comment, or share, the algorithm takes notes. If you’ve spent months engaging with stressful news or outrage content, your feed has been carefully optimized to show you more of the same. With consistent effort over 5 to 10 days, you can reshape what appears on your screen.
TikTok
TikTok’s For You page is notoriously responsive to engagement patterns. Go to Settings, then Content Preferences, then Reset For You feed to start fresh. After resetting, spend 3 to 5 days actively liking and watching calming, educational, or humorous content all the way through. Quickly scroll past anything negative without pausing. The algorithm will adapt faster than you might expect.
Start by unfollowing or muting accounts that consistently trigger stress. On the Explore page, tap the three dots on upsetting posts and select “Not Interested.” Then actively search for and engage with content that makes you feel good, whether that’s nature photography, cooking videos, or art accounts. Your Explore page will shift within a week.
Twitter/X
This platform rewards outrage, so you’ll need to be strategic. Mute specific keywords related to topics that pull you into doomscrolling spirals. Create Lists of accounts you actually want to hear from, and use those instead of the main feed. Switch your timeline to “Following only” view to avoid algorithmically inserted content.
YouTube
Go to your account settings and clear your watch history entirely. Use the “Not Interested” option on recommended videos that don’t serve you. Create a dedicated playlist filled with content that relaxes or inspires you, then watch from that playlist regularly. YouTube’s recommendations will gradually reflect your new viewing patterns.
Be patient with this process. Algorithms need consistent signals over time, so one day of positive engagement won’t undo months of doomscrolling habits.
The 30-day doomscrolling recovery timeline
Breaking a doomscrolling habit doesn’t happen overnight. Your brain needs time to adjust, and knowing what to expect at each stage can help you push through the hard parts instead of giving up when things feel uncomfortable.
Week 1 (days 1–7): The withdrawal phase
This first week is the hardest, and that’s completely normal. You’ll likely experience increased anxiety, irritability, and an almost magnetic pull toward your phone. You might find yourself picking up your phone dozens of times without even thinking about it, only to remember you’re trying to change. Your dopamine system is essentially recalibrating, and it protests loudly at first. Expect restless evenings and some difficulty falling asleep as your mind adjusts to less stimulation.
Week 2 (days 8–14): The turning point
Somewhere around day eight or nine, something shifts. The constant urges start to quiet down. Sleep often improves noticeably during this week as your nervous system settles. You might catch yourself feeling genuinely bored, which is actually a good sign. Boredom means your brain is no longer demanding constant input. This is when you start feeling the difference, not just knowing it intellectually.
Week 3 (days 15–21): Building momentum
New habits start feeling less forced. Your mood stabilizes, and you may notice your attention span stretching longer. Reading a full article or watching a movie without checking your phone becomes easier. The replacement activities you chose in earlier weeks now feel like genuine preferences rather than obligations.
Week 4 and beyond (days 22–30): Consolidation
By now, your new patterns are becoming your default. The real victory here isn’t avoiding social media entirely. It’s being able to check it without spiraling into hours of negative content consumption.
Plan for relapse triggers
Major news events, high stress, boredom, and social isolation are the most common triggers that pull people back into old patterns. Having a specific plan for these moments, like texting a friend instead of opening an app, makes all the difference in maintaining your progress.
When doomscrolling needs professional support
Sometimes the tips and techniques just don’t stick. If you’ve tried setting limits, adjusting your environment, and building new habits multiple times without lasting change, that’s not a personal failure. It’s a sign that something deeper might be at play.
The effects of doomscrolling on mental health often run in both directions. You might scroll compulsively because you’re already experiencing anxiety or depression, not just the other way around. For some people, endless news consumption becomes a way of coping with trauma, grief, or overwhelming life circumstances. When scrolling serves as an emotional escape valve, willpower-based strategies rarely work on their own.
This is where therapy becomes genuinely useful. Psychological interventions like cognitive behavioral therapy can help break compulsive patterns by addressing the thoughts and emotions driving them. A therapist can also help uncover root causes, whether that’s unprocessed stress, trauma-informed approaches for difficult experiences, or anxiety that existed long before your phone became a problem.
Digital wellness is a legitimate mental health concern, and therapists are increasingly familiar with screen-related struggles. You don’t need to hit rock bottom to benefit from support. If doomscrolling feels connected to anxiety, depression, or other struggles, ReachLink’s free assessment can match you with a licensed therapist at your own pace, with no pressure or commitment required.
Breaking free from doomscrolling starts with compassion
Your phone habits didn’t develop because you lack discipline. They formed because technology companies designed these platforms to be nearly impossible to resist, and your brain responded exactly as evolution programmed it to. The effects of doomscrolling on mental health are real, but so is your capacity to change the pattern.
Start with one small boundary. Move your phone out of the bedroom tonight, or set a single time window for checking news tomorrow. Progress doesn’t require perfection. If you’re finding that anxiety or depression makes it harder to break the cycle on your own, ReachLink’s free assessment can connect you with a licensed therapist who understands digital wellness challenges, with no pressure or commitment required. You can also access support anywhere through the ReachLink app on iOS or Android.
FAQ
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What is doomscrolling and why does it feel so addictive?
Doomscrolling is the compulsive behavior of endlessly scrolling through negative news and social media content, often without realizing how much time has passed. It feels addictive because our brains are wired to pay attention to potential threats for survival. Social media algorithms exploit this by showing us emotionally charged content that triggers our fight-or-flight response, creating a cycle where we keep scrolling to feel informed or in control, but actually become more anxious and overwhelmed.
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How does excessive news consumption and social media scrolling impact mental health?
Doomscrolling can significantly impact mental health by increasing anxiety, depression, and sleep disturbances. Constant exposure to negative content can lead to heightened stress responses, difficulty concentrating, feelings of helplessness, and a distorted perception of reality where threats seem more common than they actually are. It can also disrupt sleep patterns, increase irritability, and contribute to social isolation as people spend more time online and less time in real-world activities.
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What therapeutic approaches are most effective for breaking the doomscrolling cycle?
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is particularly effective for addressing doomscrolling habits by helping identify triggers and thought patterns that lead to compulsive scrolling. Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) techniques like mindfulness and distress tolerance can help manage the urge to scroll during anxious moments. Therapists often use behavioral interventions such as setting specific times for news consumption, creating phone-free zones, and developing alternative coping strategies like deep breathing, journaling, or engaging in offline activities when feeling the urge to doomscroll.
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When should someone consider seeking professional help for problematic social media use?
Consider seeking therapy when doomscrolling significantly interferes with daily life, relationships, work, or sleep. Warning signs include spending several hours daily on negative content, feeling unable to stop despite wanting to, experiencing increased anxiety or depression after scrolling sessions, neglecting responsibilities or relationships, or using social media as the primary way to cope with difficult emotions. A licensed therapist can help develop healthier coping mechanisms and address underlying anxiety or depression that may be driving the behavior.
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How can therapy help establish healthier digital boundaries and media consumption habits?
Therapy provides personalized strategies for creating sustainable digital boundaries based on your specific triggers and goals. A therapist can help you understand the emotional needs that doomscrolling might be meeting and develop alternative ways to address those needs. Through techniques like mindfulness training, cognitive restructuring, and behavioral planning, therapy can help you create structured media consumption schedules, develop awareness of your scrolling patterns, and build a toolkit of healthy activities to replace compulsive scrolling behaviors.
