iPhone Focus Mode Guide

Make your iPhone quieter
without missing what matters.

Build a Focus that silences the right notifications, clears distracting icons from view, changes app behavior, and starts automatically when you need it.

Quick setup: Go to Settings > Focus, choose Do Not Disturb, Personal, Work, Sleep, or tap the plus button to create a custom Focus. Choose the people and apps that may notify you, connect a Lock Screen or Home Screen, then add a schedule.

The crucial limitation: Focus mode does not block apps. A silenced Instagram notification will not appear normally, but you can still tap Instagram and use it. Focus reduces incoming interruptions; Screen Time or a dedicated app blocker restricts access.

Part 1

Set up a Focus correctly

1. Pick one job for the Focus. “Work without social alerts” is easier to configure than “make my phone less distracting.” Use separate Focus modes for work, sleep, reading, exercise, or personal time when their allowed contacts differ.

2. Choose people. Under Allow Notifications, add the contacts who should break through. You can instead silence selected people. Decide whether repeated calls and calls from allowed groups should pass through.

3. Choose apps. Allow essential apps such as calendar, authentication, transportation, or work messaging. Time Sensitive Notifications can bypass a Focus when enabled, so turn that option off if apps label too many alerts as urgent.

4. Review Focus Status. When sharing is enabled, supported messaging apps may tell others that your notifications are silenced. It does not reveal the name of your Focus.

Test the result with a real call and message. A configuration that looks right in Settings can still be wrong for an on-call shift, caregiver, or emergency contact.

Part 2

Use a clean Home Screen with Focus

Inside the Focus settings, choose a Lock Screen and one or more Home Screen pages. Create a page containing only the tools needed for that context—perhaps Calendar, Notes, Messages, Maps, and a task app—then assign it to Work Focus.

This removes tempting icons from the active Home Screen, but it does not hide, delete, or lock those apps. They remain reachable through App Library, Spotlight, Siri, links, and notifications you still allow. Treat a custom Home Screen as visual cleanup, not access control.

You can also link a Focus from the Lock Screen gallery. Changing to that Lock Screen can activate the linked Focus, which is useful when you want a visible signal that work or sleep mode is active.

Part 3

Schedule Focus by time, location, or app

Open Settings > Focus, select the Focus, then tap Add Schedule. A time schedule fits recurring work hours. A location schedule can activate at an office, library, or gym. An app schedule starts when a chosen app opens—for example, turning on Reading Focus with Books.

Smart Activation can turn on an eligible Focus based on signals such as location and app use. If automation feels unpredictable, use explicit schedules instead. In Control Center, press and hold Focus to turn a mode on manually or choose an end condition such as one hour or until leaving a location.

Enable Share Across Devices only if you want the Focus active across Apple devices signed in to the same Apple Account. Otherwise your Mac or iPad may become quiet when you intended to change only the iPhone.

Part 4

Add Focus filters

Focus filters narrow the information shown inside supported apps. Depending on the apps installed, you may be able to show one Mail account, a chosen Calendar, a Safari tab group, selected Messages conversations, or system settings such as Dark Mode or Low Power Mode.

A filter is different from notification permission. Allowing Mail notifications decides whether an alert appears; a Mail Focus filter decides which account is shown while you use Mail. Apple notes that Focus filters do not sync through Share Across Devices, so configure them on each device where needed.

Some Apple Intelligence features can prioritize important alerts or offer a Reduce Interruptions Focus on supported hardware, languages, and regions. Review the allowed results rather than assuming automated priority will match every real-world emergency.

Part 5

When Focus is not enough

ToolWhat it controlsBest use
FocusNotifications, screens, and supported filters.Reducing incoming interruptions.
Screen TimeDaily limits, Downtime, reports, and restrictions.Built-in time allowances and family controls.
FellaSelected apps blocked all day, with one 5-minute emergency unlock.Stopping reflexive opening while preserving rare access.

A strong setup can use both layers: Focus decides who may interrupt you, while an app blocker decides which apps you may open. Fella is deliberately not a Focus replacement—it does not manage notifications, Home Screens, or schedules.

For Apple’s latest menu details, see the official Focus setup guide.

Focus mode FAQ

Open Control Center, tap Focus, then choose a Focus. For a duration, tap the More button beside it.

No. Focus silences or allows notifications and changes screens or supported filters, but it does not prevent an app from opening.

Yes. Add a schedule based on time, location, or an app from Settings > Focus.

They change what supported apps or system features show while a Focus is active, such as a Mail account or Safari tab group.

Focus manages interruptions. An app blocker controls access to selected apps. They can work together.