Articles - Personal productivity

How to Do a Digital Declutter for a More Productive Life

If you’re digitally inclined, then you know how it goes. Your phone is always buzzing with notifications of emails, news, likes, and whatever else the apps you have installed decide to push your way. With this kind of life, it’s simple to feel overwhelmed by the digital cacophony in today’s hyperconnected society.

Most people unknowingly accumulate clutter on multiple devices, from cluttered desktops and underutilized apps to overflowing inboxes. Although this type of clutter is invisible, it has a profound impact. It can make you less focused, cause your devices to lag, and increase your stress.

Digital decluttering can help with that. Decluttering your digital space is crucial to regaining control and mental clarity, just as cleaning a dirty room is. A digital declutter involves more than just clearing out outdated data; it entails a comprehensive overhaul of your digital routines and processes to lead a more efficient and effective life.

This digital decluttering guide will help you regain control of your time, energy, and attention. With simple and practical steps, you’ll learn how to declutter your digital space, boost focus, and build sustainable habits to maintain a cleaner, calmer digital environment.

Why digital decluttering matters

Digital clutter isn’t just about aesthetics. A slow, messy, overloaded device can impact your performance and peace of mind. Studies show that digital or physical clutter can decrease productivity and increase stress.

If you’re constantly looking for files, battling email overload, or bouncing between apps, you’re not alone.

In fact, according to McKinsey Global Institute, the average worker spends nearly 28% of their workweek managing email. This has a significant impact, since people switch between tasks or tools every 40 seconds on average. Email contributes to the bigger problem of less focus.

Digital cleanup can improve speed, make information easier to find, and reclaim valuable time.

The next sections explore how it affects important aspects of your life.

Mental and emotional impact

A cluttered digital space increases stress and mental fatigue. It can also lead to decision paralysis, overwhelm, and even spill over into offline life, making individuals feel generally disorganized. 

A 2024 survey found that 62% of Americans feel stress or anxiety due to the overwhelming number of digital files they manage. Similarly, 28% of users say digital clutter directly increases their stress levels, and 22% report that unread notifications contribute to their anxiety. Digital clutter doesn’t just stay on your screen; it affects your whole life.

Digital overload can also affect sleep, reduce attention span, and lead to burnout. Excessive screen time, particularly before bedtime, has been shown to disrupt melatonin production, negatively affecting sleep quality and cognitive function. That’s why managing it is both a mental health strategy and a productivity booster. 

Productivity and clarity connection

There’s a strong link between digital order and mental clarity. When the digital environment is well-organized, the brain can focus better. You’re less likely to be distracted and more likely to enter a state of “flow.”

According to Blanding (2016), physical clutter competes for attention, reducing performance. The same applies to digital clutter — it becomes mental noise. Creating a cleaner digital landscape gives your mind the calm it needs to think clearly and act efficiently. 

Digital order enhances task efficiency by reducing time spent on searching, switching, and managing distractions.

Want to learn how to overcome the mental and emotional effects of clarity, so that it can make you more productive? That’s what the next section will be about.

Step-by-step digital declutter practices

Digital decluttering does not have to be overwhelming. With the right system and habits, it can become a powerful tool to clean up your digital life and maintain simplicity in the long term. Explore a practical, research-informed process to get started.

Assess your digital landscape

Before you begin, it’s essential to understand what you’re working with. This means taking stock of all your digital platforms and devices. Most people underestimate how much digital junk they’ve accumulated across multiple places, so you need to know for sure.

Check the following:

  • Apps: unused software, games, duplicate tools
  • Email: inboxes, subscriptions, spam, unread threads
  • Devices: phone, laptop, tablet, external drives
  • Spaces: downloads folders, desktops, cloud storage, camera rolls

During this phase, just observe. Identify what’s slowing you down or stressing you out. Do you get overwhelmed opening your inbox? Is your desktop full of icons? Are your apps scattered?

This inventory step builds awareness and highlights the digital “hot spots” that need attention.

Learn more: Asst. Prof. Naciye Güliz Uğur: Digital Clutter, Its Harms, and Measures | Room by Room #15 – Insights 

Set clear goals and intentions

Jumping into a digital clean-up without goals can lead to frustration or burnout. Some possible goals include:

  • Finding files quickly
  • Spending less time on email
  • Freeing up space on your device
  • Creating fewer digital distractions
  • Having a more calming phone or desktop screen

Be specific. For example: “I want to reduce my active apps from 80 to 20,” or “I want to check email just twice a day.” Then decide how often you’ll do mini cleanups: weekly, monthly, or quarterly.

Use the popular 12-12-12 rule as a fun starter. Setting small, achievable goals gives you momentum and builds consistency :

  • Unsubscribe from 12 services or emails
  • Delete 12 digital items (files, photos, emails)
  • Organize 12 things (folders, bookmarks, app positions)

Organize files and folders

A common source of frustration is file chaos. Searching for a document buried in a sea of random downloads is a time-consuming and energy-consuming task. To fix that, you must organize all your digital files. A well-structured file system supports faster access and mental clarity.

Here’s how to sort it out:

  1. Create a file naming system. To stay digitally organized, adopt a consistent file naming system — such as YYYY-MM-DD_ProjectName_Version (e.g., “2025-05-06_ClientABC_Proposal_V2”) — to ensure chronological order and easy retrieval.
  2. Create clear parent folders. Organize your files into broad categories such as work, personal, finances, and photos. Use specific file names by category with subfolders sorted by year or project.
  3. Archive inactive and outdated files. Move files you no longer need frequently into clearly labeled folders like “Archive_2023” to keep your active workspace clean.
  4. Maintain your downloads folder regularly. Sort it by date weekly and delete files older than six months to prevent a buildup.
  5. Organize cloud storage similarly. Apply the same structured folder system to your cloud storage to maintain consistency and easy access across devices.

Likewise, use email filters to auto-label messages and regularly clean out items that have been untouched for over 30 days. This structured approach reduces clutter and improves task efficiency.

For email, create folders like “Action needed,” “Waiting for reply,” and “Read later.” Filters and labels can automate this process and save time. This system enables you to declutter your digital space without having to redo everything constantly.

Streamline apps and software

Having too many apps on your phone or computer can clutter your interface and divide your attention. Many apps send push notifications, track your activity, or just take up space.

Here are some tips on how to manage them:

  • Install updates to improve performance
  • Delete apps you haven’t used in 30–60 days
  • Unsubscribe from services you no longer use
  • Use one tool per purpose to avoid duplicates
  • Group remaining apps into folders (e.g., social, finance, productivity, etc.)

To improve workflow, consider tools like:

  • Clean Email or Unroll.me to manage email clutter. These tools help organize your inbox by grouping similar emails, allowing you to unsubscribe from unwanted newsletters, and making bulk email management easier, so you can reduce inbox overload quickly.
  • IFTTT (If This Then That) to automate repetitive actions. This service connects different apps and devices, enabling you to create simple automation rules (called “applets”) that perform tasks automatically, such as saving email attachments to cloud storage or posting across multiple social media accounts.
  • Backblaze or Google Drive for automatic backups. Backblaze is a cloud backup service that continuously backs up your files securely in the background, while Google Drive offers cloud storage that syncs your files across devices and allows easy access and sharing, ensuring your data is safe and accessible anywhere.

Trimming your software stack will free up space and reduce digital overwhelm.

Manage notifications and settings

Notifications are a major productivity killer. They break your focus, interrupt flow, and cause you to react rather than act intentionally. Here’s how to take control:

  • Turn off push notifications for non-essential apps
  • Schedule specific times to check social media or email
  • Adjust notification sounds and banners to reduce stress
  • Use “Do Not Disturb” or “Focus Mode” during deep work
  • Allow only priority contacts to reach you during these times

To reduce digital distractions and regain control of your attention, start by managing notifications across all your devices.

iOS

iOS lets you mute notifications from apps that aren’t urgent, like social media or promotional alerts, while keeping important ones active, such as messages from family or calendar reminders.

You can fully customize notification styles or use Focus Mode to reduce distractions during work or rest.

  1. Go to Settings > Notifications
  2. Select each app > Turn off Allow Notifications or customize banners/sounds
  3. Enable Focus Mode via Settings > Focus to silence distractions during work

Android

Android allows you to mute or limit notifications from apps that interrupt you unnecessarily while preserving alerts from essential apps like phone calls or alarms. The Do Not Disturb feature helps you restrict alerts to only the most important ones during focused times.

  1. Open Settings > Apps & Notifications > Notifications
  2. Select apps to mute or limit alerts
  3. Use Do Not Disturb to allow only essential calls or alarms

Windows

Windows allows you to mute notifications from less important apps to maintain focus while allowing critical notifications, such as system alerts or messaging apps, to come through. Customize your notification settings to suit your workflow.

  1. Go to Settings > System > Notifications & Actions
  2. Toggle off notifications for non-essential apps

Mac

Mac lets you tailor which apps can send notifications and how they appear. This helps you stay focused by silencing non-urgent alerts while keeping important ones, such as calendar events or messages, active.

  1. Open System Settings > Notifications
  2. Customize banners, sounds, and app alerts

This practice may feel unfamiliar at first, but it gives you more control over your attention. You don’t have to be “always available” to be productive.

Clean your digital footprint

Your digital footprint includes everything you’ve posted, clicked on, or signed up for. Over time, this can become large, unmanageable, and even pose security risks.

It is essential to clean your digital footprint, as excessive online information about you can be risky. Hackers can use it to steal your identity or trick you with scams, and strangers might see your private information if you don’t take care of it.

Having a big digital footprint can add online clutter, making it harder to keep your online life organized and slowing down your devices. You can keep your digital life neat and safer by deleting old accounts, clearing your history, and checking app permissions.

Here’s how to clean your digital footprint:

  1. Search your name online and review what’s public
  2. Delete old accounts from websites you no longer use
  3. Use tools like JustDeleteMe or AccountKiller
  4. Clear cookies and browsing history
  5. Turn off location tracking and limit data-sharing permissions

If you’re wondering how to erase your digital footprint, the goal isn’t to disappear — it’s to minimize your data exposure and clean up what you can control.

In conclusion

Digital decluttering is more than a tech chore. It is an act of self-care. In a world where everyone is constantly online, taking time to organize your digital space creates room for better habits, better thinking, and a better life.

You will feel calmer and more capable when your phone is not buzzing, your inbox is not overflowing, and your files are easily accessible. You will waste less time and have more energy for the things that matter most.

Do not wait until burnout hits you or your device slows to a crawl. Start your digital declutter today; step by step, screen by screen. Your mind will thank you.

If you want to see more resources on digital productivity, check out the Personal Productivity Science Labs. The lab uses the research of the Institute for Life Management Science to produce courses, certifications, podcasts, videos, and other tools. Visit the Personal Productivity Science Labs today.

Photo by rawpixel.com on Freepik

Rohmaa Tahir

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