---
title: "How to Improve Your Attention Span: 9 Methods"
date: 2026-07-16
author: "Sofia Ramirez"
featured_image: "https://sqmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/how-to-improve-your-attention-span.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Technology"
    url: "/technology.md"
tags:
  - name: "Guides"
    url: "/tag/guides.md"
---

# How to Improve Your Attention Span: 9 Methods

Average attention on a single screen has fallen to roughly 47 seconds, down from about two and a half minutes in 2004, according to research tracked by University of California, Irvine professor Gloria Mark. That decline is not a character flaw, and it responds to deliberate change. The methods below split into two levers the evidence supports: cutting the external interruptions that hijack your focus, and rebuilding the internal capacity that sustains it.

## Key Takeaways

- Average single-screen attention has dropped, according to Gloria Mark, to about **47 seconds**, from roughly two and a half minutes in 2004.
- Brief switching blocks can cost, according to APA research, as much as **40%** of someone’s productive time.
- Mindfulness gains came quickly, per Mrazek and colleagues at UC Santa Barbara: as little as two weeks of training improved working memory capacity and reading comprehension while reducing mind-wandering.
- A phone’s mere presence, according to Ward and colleagues, reduces available cognitive capacity even when you successfully resist checking it.
- A notification without a response was, per Stothart and colleagues, as distracting as actually answering, and notified participants made more than three times as many errors.
- Aerobic training helped, according to Smith and colleagues, across **2,049** participants in randomized controlled trials, with modest improvements in attention and processing speed.

## The 9 Methods at a Glance

**The nine methods below fall into two groups:** Those that cut external interruptions and those that rebuild internal capacity. The table maps each to the lever it pulls and the research behind it.

MethodLeverEvidenceMindfulness meditationRebuild capacityUC Santa Barbara, two-week trainingSingle-taskingCut interruptionsStanford media-multitasking studyPhone in another roomCut interruptionsWard “Brain Drain” experimentsSilence notificationsCut interruptionsFlorida State University studyAerobic exerciseRebuild capacityPsychosomatic Medicine meta-analysisSleep protectionRebuild capacityVigilant-attention reviewNature breaksRebuild capacityAttention Restoration TheoryFocused time blocksCut interruptionsAPA task-switching researchL-theanine + caffeineRebuild capacitySystematic review (modest, caveated)*Source: SQ Magazine compilation of cited studies, 2026*

## 1. Practice Mindfulness Meditation

Researchers at UC Santa Barbara found that as little as two weeks of mindfulness training significantly improved reading comprehension, working memory capacity, and the ability to focus, with results published in Psychological Science. Mindfulness is the single most evidence-backed capacity-building method here because it trains the act of returning attention to a chosen target.

**The mechanism is direct:** Noticing your mind has wandered and gently steering it back is the repetition that strengthens attention. Lead author Michael Mrazek reported that the team found reduced mind-wandering in every way they measured it.

Start with 10 minutes a day. Sit, follow your breath, and when you notice your thoughts drifting, return to the breath without judgment. The “noticing and returning” is the exercise, not a failure of it.

**Pro tip:** Treat each distraction during practice as a rep, not a setback. The goal is not an empty mind; it is catching the wander faster each time. That same catch-and-return reflex is what helps you stay on a work task longer.





## 2. Single-Task on Purpose and Stop Media Multitasking

A group of Stanford researchers led by Eyal Ophir found that heavy media multitaskers are more susceptible to interference from irrelevant stimuli and less effective at switching between tasks than people who handle one task at a time. Single-tasking protects focus because the brain pays a measurable toll every time it switches.

The cost compounds across a day. With task-switching draining up to **40%** of productive time per the APA, juggling [email](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/email-statistics/), chat, and a document is slower and more error-prone than finishing one before starting the next. Ophir’s team searched for an upside to heavy multitasking and, in his words, We kept looking for what they’re better at, and we didn’t find it.

Close every tab and app not tied to your current task. Keep one screen, one job. Batch similar small tasks (replies, approvals) into a single block instead of letting them interrupt deep work.

## 3. Move Your Phone to Another Room

The Ward “Brain Drain” experiments at the University of Texas at Austin found that the mere presence of one’s own [smartphone](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/smartphone-statistics/) occupies limited-capacity cognitive resources, leaving fewer available for other tasks. Moving your phone out of sight beats silencing it, because the device drains focus even when you never touch it.

The findings were counterintuitive. Results from two experiments showed that even when people successfully maintained sustained attention and resisted checking their phones, the mere presence of the device reduced available cognitive capacity. A face-down, silenced phone on the desk still costs you. The researchers also found that these cognitive costs were highest for those highest in smartphone dependence.

The practical fix is physical distance. When you need real focus, leave the phone in another room, not just in your pocket or bag. Our [smartphone addiction data](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/smartphone-addiction-statistics/) shows how strong the pull to check has become, which is exactly why proximity matters.

## 4. Silence Notifications, Not Just Calls

A Florida State University study led by Cary Stothart found that cell phone notifications alone significantly disrupted performance on an attention-demanding task, even when participants did not interact with the device. Silencing every notification, not only ringtones, protects attention because an alert disrupts you whether or not you act on it.

The size of the effect surprised the researchers. They concluded that receiving a notification but not responding was as distracting as actually answering the phone or replying to a text, and that notified participants were more than three times as likely to make a mistake. A buzz you ignore still pulls your mind off task.

Turn on **Do Not Disturb** or **Focus mode** during deep work. Disable banners and badges for anything non-urgent. The aim is a clean attentional field, not faster reactions to interruptions.

## 5. Get Regular Aerobic Exercise

A meta-analysis published in Psychosomatic Medicine pooled data from **2,049** participants across randomized controlled trials and found that aerobic exercise training produced measurable cognitive benefits. Exercise supports attention because the gains show up in controlled trials, not just self-report.

The effects are real but moderate. People randomly assigned to aerobic training showed modest improvements in attention and processing speed and in executive function, though benefits to working memory were less consistent. Exercise is a reliable foundation for focus rather than a quick fix.

Aim for the widely recommended baseline of regular moderate aerobic activity, such as brisk walking, cycling, or swimming, several times a week. Consistency matters more than intensity for the cognitive payoff.

## 6. Protect Your Sleep

A review of sleep deprivation and vigilant attention describes the psychomotor vigilance test, where lapses of attention are traditionally defined as response times greater than **500** milliseconds. Protecting sleep matters because attention falters quickly when you are short on rest.

Those lapses accumulate as sleep debt grows. The review notes that the deleterious impact of sleep deprivation is frequently attributed to lapses in vigilant attention, the brief moments when the mind simply drops the task. No amount of willpower fully compensates for a sleep-deprived brain.

Prioritize a consistent sleep schedule and enough hours for your body. Cutting screen time before bed helps both your sleep and, downstream, your daytime focus.

## 7. Take Restorative Nature Breaks

Attention Restoration Theory, developed by Stephen and Rachel Kaplan, holds that after a task requiring focused and directed attention, it is easy to feel depleted, and natural settings let directed attention recover. Restorative nature breaks help because focused attention is a finite resource that depletes and needs to recover.

The setting matters. In one study, participants who walked in a natural environment after fatiguing tasks showed the greatest restoration of directed attention, more than those who walked in a city or relaxed passively. Even short, regular contact with greenery can recharge the focus you spend at a desk.

Step outside for a walk in a park, along a tree-lined street, or anywhere with natural elements. If you cannot get out, a window view or even nature imagery offers a smaller version of the same restorative effect.

## 8. Work in Focused Time Blocks

Task-switching can drain up to **40%** of productive time according to the APA, so a single uninterrupted block beats the same minutes scattered across constant context changes. Working in protected time blocks builds attention by removing the switching that erodes it.

Structure supports the habit. Gloria Mark recommends “meta-awareness,” being aware of what you’re doing as it unfolds, so an automatic reach for the phone becomes a conscious choice. She also suggests picturing your future self, imagining how a current action will help you later.

Block 25 to 50 minutes for one task, then take a real break. During the block, the phone is in another room, and notifications are off. Over time, the blocks can lengthen as your stamina grows.

## 9. Consider an L-Theanine and Caffeine Pairing

A systematic review covering the combination notes that a 2008 study by Haskell and colleagues tested **250** milligrams of L-theanine and **150** milligrams of caffeine, alone and combined, on cognition and mood. The pairing can give a modest attention boost, with important caveats.

The combination outperformed either compound alone on some measures. The review reports quicker simple reaction time, quicker working-memory reaction time, and better accuracy of sentence verification for participants taking the combination, and concludes that L-theanine and caffeine improve cognitive performance, particularly attention, with the most pronounced effects when combined.

Keep expectations grounded. The benefits are modest and short-acting, and a stimulant pairing helps reduce the cost of mild tiredness rather than rebuild lasting focus.

**Read this before reaching for supplements:** The L-theanine and caffeine effects in the research are modest and not a substitute for sleep, exercise, or fewer interruptions. Caffeine sensitivity varies; it can disrupt sleep (which harms attention the next day), and supplements are loosely regulated. People who are pregnant, have a heart condition, or take medication should consult a doctor before adding caffeine or L-theanine.



## Why Your Attention Span Feels Shorter Than It Used To

Gloria Mark, a professor of informatics at the University of California, Irvine, found that average attention on any given screen fell to a mere **47 seconds**, from an average of two and a half minutes when she began researching the topic in 2004. Your attention span feels shorter because the data shows it measurably is. The pull toward the next tab, message, or feed has compressed how long focus naturally holds.

Two forces drive most of that compression. Task-switching is one: the American Psychological Association notes that even brief mental blocks created by shifting between tasks can cost as much as **40%** of productive time, drawing on experiments by Rubinstein, Evans, and Meyer. The device itself is the other, since it keeps interrupting before focus can settle.

Engagement windows keep contracting even as the platforms competing for them multiply. Attention, more than clicks or impressions, has become the currency every app is built to capture. You can read the demand side of that shift in our [social media attention span data](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/social-media-attention-span-statistics/), which documents the same shrinking-window trend at the content level.

**Before you start:** None of these methods requires special equipment, only time and consistency. Pick two or three that fit your day rather than attempting all nine at once. Most show benefits within days to a few weeks of regular practice, not overnight.



## Does screen time actually shrink your attention span?

Screen time correlates with shorter sustained-attention windows, though the relationship runs both ways. Gloria Mark’s screen measurements show attention dropping to **47 seconds** on average, and heavy device use trains the habit of frequent switching. Reducing aimless screen time, covered in our guide to [reduce screen time on social media](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/how-to-reduce-screen-time-on-social-media/), is one lever; rebuilding focus capacity is the other.

## Common Mistakes That Sabotage Your Focus

The Ward experiments showed that mere presence reduces cognitive capacity even when you resist checking, so leaving a silenced phone on the desk is a common mistake willpower alone cannot fix. Most focus errors treat attention as a willpower problem rather than an environment problem. Distance does what discipline cannot.

Trying to multitask through the problem backfires too. Because heavy multitaskers are less effective at filtering irrelevant information and switching tasks, “powering through” several streams at once trains the very habit you want to break. Chasing supplements or hacks while skipping sleep fails for a related reason, since lapses in vigilant attention are a core consequence of being under-rested.

- **Phone on the desk, face down:** Move it to another room for any task that needs real focus.
- **Notifications “just on silent”:** A buzz you ignore still costs you; switch to Focus mode entirely.
- **Multitasking to save time:** Single-tasking is faster once switching costs are counted.
- **Skipping sleep for productivity:** Under-rested attention lapses no matter how motivated you are.

## When a Shrinking Attention Span May Signal Something More

The methods above address the everyday, device-driven erosion that Gloria Mark’s **47-second** screen-attention figure captures. A short attention span is usually a product of habits and environment, yet sometimes it points to something a professional should assess. Persistent, lifelong difficulty that disrupts work, relationships, or daily tasks is a different matter.

If concentration problems are severe, long-standing, and present across many areas of life, that pattern may warrant a conversation with a doctor or qualified clinician. Heavy device use plays a role too, and our [screen time by age data](https://sqmagazine.co.uk/average-screen-time-by-age-statistics/) shows how usage patterns differ across life stages. The goal of this distinction is to help you decide when self-directed habits are enough and when an evaluation is the sensible next step.

## Is a short attention span a sign of ADHD?

A short attention span is not, by itself, a sign of ADHD. Everyday distractibility is widespread and tracks closely with the device-driven attention decline Gloria Mark documents. ADHD is a clinical condition diagnosed by professionals based on a persistent pattern of symptoms across settings and time, not a single busy week. Only a qualified clinician can assess it.

## How Long Does It Take to Improve Your Attention Span?

A UC Santa Barbara study found measurable gains in working memory and focus after as little as two weeks of mindfulness training, which is the clearest benchmark available. Improvement timelines vary by method, and some show up surprisingly fast. Environmental changes, such as moving your phone to another room or silencing notifications, work immediately because they remove an active drain rather than build a new skill.

Capacity-building methods like exercise and consistent sleep compound over weeks. The realistic expectation is a noticeable difference within days for the interruption fixes and within a few weeks for the training and lifestyle changes, provided you keep them consistent.

## Conclusion

Rebuilding focus starts from a sober baseline: average screen attention has slipped from about two and a half minutes in 2004 to **47 seconds** today, and task-switching can quietly consume **40%** of productive time. The nine methods here work along two levers, cutting the interruptions that hijack attention (phone in another room, notifications off, single-tasking) and rebuilding the capacity that sustains it (mindfulness, sleep, exercise, nature breaks). The strongest, fastest wins tend to be environmental, while the durable gains come from consistent practice.

Anyone whose work depends on sustained concentration stands to benefit most, from students to knowledge workers. The changes cost little beyond intention. As attention becomes the scarce resource every app competes for, the people who reclaim it deliberately will hold an advantage that compounds over time.