How to Block Apps From Being Downloaded on iPhone?

You open the App Store “just to look.” Ten minutes later, three new apps you didn’t need popped in your home screen, you gave two of them permission to track you, and agreed to yet another “free trial” that will become a quiet monthly charge.

Guide

20 oct. 2025

4 min

Don’t worry. It happens to the best of us.

So if this sounds familiar, you’re not broken. It just means that we’re living in an ecosystem where installing is the easiest thing in the world and uninstalling (or even remembering to cancel) takes work.

We can agree on one thing: this can’t go on. The good news? This article is here to help you take back control and make sure it doesn’t happen again.

Why Blocking New App Installs Helps More Than You Think

Focus: Every Install Adds “Mental Noise”

Each new app brings icons, badges, and notifications. Even when you don’t open them, they tug at your attention. Research shows that:

New apps multiply both “presence” cues (more icons to look at) and notifications (more pings), so installs quietly chip away at concentration.

Money: Subscriptions & Micro-Charges Pile Up

Many apps are “free to start” but monetize later—via subscriptions, in-app-purchases, or bundles. People consistently underestimate what they’re paying.

Consumers guess one number when asked about their monthly subscriptions, then spend much more when the real charges are added up (e.g., a 2024 study found people estimated ~$86 but actually paid ~$219 per month).

Environment: More Apps, More Data, More Energy (And Eventually, More E-Waste)

Apps don’t just sit there. They fetch data, push notifications, and constantly update—tiny background tasks that consume network and device energy. Apple explicitly notes that Background App Refresh and background activities affect battery life (and thus energy use).

On the network side, the world’s data transmission networks consume hundreds of terawatt-hours of electricity annually, and overall data-center demand is projected to double by 2026. Trimming unnecessary app traffic is a small but real lever.

The downstream picture matters too: phones and accessories eventually become e-waste; only about 22% is formally recycled (2022 data), and volumes are rising.

Installing less ▸ Upgrading less ▸ Throwing away less.

Don’t worry. It happens to the best of us.

So if this sounds familiar, you’re not broken. It just means that we’re living in an ecosystem where installing is the easiest thing in the world and uninstalling (or even remembering to cancel) takes work.

We can agree on one thing: this can’t go on. The good news? This article is here to help you take back control and make sure it doesn’t happen again.

Why Blocking New App Installs Helps More Than You Think

Focus: Every Install Adds “Mental Noise”

Each new app brings icons, badges, and notifications. Even when you don’t open them, they tug at your attention. Research shows that:

New apps multiply both “presence” cues (more icons to look at) and notifications (more pings), so installs quietly chip away at concentration.

Money: Subscriptions & Micro-Charges Pile Up

Many apps are “free to start” but monetize later—via subscriptions, in-app-purchases, or bundles. People consistently underestimate what they’re paying.

Consumers guess one number when asked about their monthly subscriptions, then spend much more when the real charges are added up (e.g., a 2024 study found people estimated ~$86 but actually paid ~$219 per month).

Environment: More Apps, More Data, More Energy (And Eventually, More E-Waste)

Apps don’t just sit there. They fetch data, push notifications, and constantly update—tiny background tasks that consume network and device energy. Apple explicitly notes that Background App Refresh and background activities affect battery life (and thus energy use).

On the network side, the world’s data transmission networks consume hundreds of terawatt-hours of electricity annually, and overall data-center demand is projected to double by 2026. Trimming unnecessary app traffic is a small but real lever.

The downstream picture matters too: phones and accessories eventually become e-waste; only about 22% is formally recycled (2022 data), and volumes are rising.

Installing less ▸ Upgrading less ▸ Throwing away less.

Don’t worry. It happens to the best of us.

So if this sounds familiar, you’re not broken. It just means that we’re living in an ecosystem where installing is the easiest thing in the world and uninstalling (or even remembering to cancel) takes work.

We can agree on one thing: this can’t go on. The good news? This article is here to help you take back control and make sure it doesn’t happen again.

Why Blocking New App Installs Helps More Than You Think

Focus: Every Install Adds “Mental Noise”

Each new app brings icons, badges, and notifications. Even when you don’t open them, they tug at your attention. Research shows that:

New apps multiply both “presence” cues (more icons to look at) and notifications (more pings), so installs quietly chip away at concentration.

Money: Subscriptions & Micro-Charges Pile Up

Many apps are “free to start” but monetize later—via subscriptions, in-app-purchases, or bundles. People consistently underestimate what they’re paying.

Consumers guess one number when asked about their monthly subscriptions, then spend much more when the real charges are added up (e.g., a 2024 study found people estimated ~$86 but actually paid ~$219 per month).

Environment: More Apps, More Data, More Energy (And Eventually, More E-Waste)

Apps don’t just sit there. They fetch data, push notifications, and constantly update—tiny background tasks that consume network and device energy. Apple explicitly notes that Background App Refresh and background activities affect battery life (and thus energy use).

On the network side, the world’s data transmission networks consume hundreds of terawatt-hours of electricity annually, and overall data-center demand is projected to double by 2026. Trimming unnecessary app traffic is a small but real lever.

The downstream picture matters too: phones and accessories eventually become e-waste; only about 22% is formally recycled (2022 data), and volumes are rising.

Installing less ▸ Upgrading less ▸ Throwing away less.

Votre téléphone, vos règles. Bloquez ce que vous voulez, quand vous voulez.

Votre téléphone, vos règles. Bloquez ce que vous voulez, quand vous voulez.

Votre téléphone, vos règles. Bloquez ce que vous voulez, quand vous voulez.

Tutorial 1: Block New App Installs Using Only iPhone Settings

  1. Open iPhoneSettings.

  2. Screen TimeTurn On App & Website Activity (if it’s not already the case).

  3. Tap Content & Privacy RestrictionsTurn it on.

  4. App Installations & PurchasesInstalling AppsDon’t Allow.

Tutorial 2: Block New Installs with Jomo

If you haven’t installed Jomo yetfree on iPhone, iPad, and Mac — what are you waiting for?

It might just save your life: block distracting apps whenever you decide, stop new app installs, prevent in-app purchases… In short, a set of tools that turns your phone into an ally instead of an enemy.

  1. Download Jomo from the App Store.

  2. Open the app ▸ Rules+Recurring Session.

  3. BlockTap Additional Options & WebsitesApp InstallationsSave.

This next step is optional, but you can give yourself one tiny break a day (for example, if you need to update apps).

  1. BreaksNumber of breaks 1.

  2. BreaksBefore Each BreakRecopy Text (250 characters, so you’re sure you really want to unlock the App Store).

Tutorial 1: Block New App Installs Using Only iPhone Settings

  1. Open iPhoneSettings.

  2. Screen TimeTurn On App & Website Activity (if it’s not already the case).

  3. Tap Content & Privacy RestrictionsTurn it on.

  4. App Installations & PurchasesInstalling AppsDon’t Allow.

Tutorial 2: Block New Installs with Jomo

If you haven’t installed Jomo yetfree on iPhone, iPad, and Mac — what are you waiting for?

It might just save your life: block distracting apps whenever you decide, stop new app installs, prevent in-app purchases… In short, a set of tools that turns your phone into an ally instead of an enemy.

  1. Download Jomo from the App Store.

  2. Open the app ▸ Rules+Recurring Session.

  3. BlockTap Additional Options & WebsitesApp InstallationsSave.

This next step is optional, but you can give yourself one tiny break a day (for example, if you need to update apps).

  1. BreaksNumber of breaks 1.

  2. BreaksBefore Each BreakRecopy Text (250 characters, so you’re sure you really want to unlock the App Store).

Tutorial 1: Block New App Installs Using Only iPhone Settings

  1. Open iPhoneSettings.

  2. Screen TimeTurn On App & Website Activity (if it’s not already the case).

  3. Tap Content & Privacy RestrictionsTurn it on.

  4. App Installations & PurchasesInstalling AppsDon’t Allow.

Tutorial 2: Block New Installs with Jomo

If you haven’t installed Jomo yetfree on iPhone, iPad, and Mac — what are you waiting for?

It might just save your life: block distracting apps whenever you decide, stop new app installs, prevent in-app purchases… In short, a set of tools that turns your phone into an ally instead of an enemy.

  1. Download Jomo from the App Store.

  2. Open the app ▸ Rules+Recurring Session.

  3. BlockTap Additional Options & WebsitesApp InstallationsSave.

This next step is optional, but you can give yourself one tiny break a day (for example, if you need to update apps).

  1. BreaksNumber of breaks 1.

  2. BreaksBefore Each BreakRecopy Text (250 characters, so you’re sure you really want to unlock the App Store).

Credits
Photographies and illustrations by Unsplash and Pexels. Tutorials and screenshots by Jomo.

The Joy Of Missing Out

Développé en Europe

Tous droits réservés à Jomo SAS, 2025

The Joy Of Missing Out

Développé en Europe

Tous droits réservés à Jomo SAS, 2025

The Joy Of Missing Out

Développé en Europe

Tous droits réservés à Jomo SAS, 2025