Comparisons
Forest App Alternative — Apps Like Forest for Focus & Habits
Founder of SelfSpark · 15 years exploring self-help & personal growth
Looking for a Forest app alternative? I planted a lot of digital trees. Here's where Forest shines, where it stops, and the best alternatives for focus and lasting habits.

I planted a small forest of guilt-trees before I admitted the obvious: Forest kept my hands off my phone for 25 minutes at a time, but it did nothing about the other 23 hours. The tree was a clever leash for a focus session. It was never going to build the daily habit underneath. If you've noticed the same thing, that's why you're after an alternative.
The short version: if you want pure focus sessions, stay in that lane; if you want the habit of focused work to stick, you need something that tracks days, not just timers. Here's the comparison.
What is the Forest app?
Forest is a focus app: start a timer, a virtual tree grows, and leaving the app early kills it. It gamifies staying off your phone, and it famously partners to plant real trees. It's charming and effective for single sessions, across iOS and Android.
Why look for a Forest alternative?
- You want to build a daily habit, not just one-off focus sprints.
- You want progress over weeks, with recovery when you miss.
- You'd like focus tied into your broader routine, not a standalone timer.
- You want fewer dead trees as a motivator (guilt has a short shelf life).
Why the phone is the real opponent
Forest is fighting the right enemy. A 2017 study by Adrian Ward and colleagues at the University of Texas at Austin — nicknamed "Brain Drain" — found that merely having your smartphone visible nearby reduced available cognitive capacity, even when it was face down and switched off. The phone doesn't have to buzz to cost you; its mere presence taxes attention.
So a timer that gets the phone out of your hand is genuinely useful. The missing half is the habit: showing up to focused work on the days you don't feel like it, and getting back to it after a bad stretch.
Best Forest alternative for lasting focus habits: SelfSpark
SelfSpark handles the part Forest doesn't — turning "focus today" into a habit that survives real weeks. It's an adaptive habit tracker that suggests a smaller version on low-energy days (a 10-minute focus block instead of an hour), keeps progress visible after a miss, and helps you see what derails you. Available on Android and web. Best for: people who can focus for a session but can't make it a routine. Take the habit fit quiz, and see our guide to beating distraction.
Other apps like Forest
- LifeUp — RPG-style gamification of tasks and habits (Android). See LifeUp alternatives.
- Habitica — turns habits into a role-playing game. See Habitica alternatives.
- Streaks — clean daily streaks on iPhone. See Streaks alternatives.
For more, see the best self-improvement apps.
FAQ
What is the best alternative to the Forest app?
For building a lasting focus habit, SelfSpark; for gamified motivation, LifeUp or Habitica. Forest is best for single focus sessions — choose an alternative when you want the daily habit to stick.
Is there a Forest alternative that builds habits, not just focus sessions?
Yes. SelfSpark tracks the daily habit of focused work and adapts when you miss, rather than only timing one session at a time.
Is there a free Forest alternative?
Many options offer free tiers, including SelfSpark and Habitica's base game. Forest itself is a low-cost one-time purchase or free with ads depending on platform.
Bottom line
Forest wins the 25-minute battle. If you keep losing the war — the daily habit of focused work — pick a tracker that builds the routine and forgives the off days. Start with the habit fit quiz.
How to turn this guide into a habit plan
Read the article once for the idea, then choose one action small enough to do on a busy day. SelfSpark works best when a habit has a full version, a reduced version, and a recovery version. The full version is what you do on a normal day. The reduced version is the smallest useful action when energy is low. The recovery version is what gets you moving again after a missed day without treating the miss as failure.
If this article compares tools, use it to decide what support you need before you pick an app. If it explains a template or habit method, write down the exact trigger, the minimum action, and how you will restart after an interruption. A good habit system should make the next step obvious when you are tired, distracted, traveling, or already behind.
SelfSpark is designed around that kind of recovery-friendly tracking. The quiz helps you choose a first plan, the tracker keeps progress visible, and short journal notes help you learn why a habit slipped so the next plan can adapt instead of becoming another rigid streak.
For the next seven days, treat the habit as an experiment. Keep the target small, write down what made it easier or harder, and adjust the plan based on what actually happened. That feedback loop is usually more useful than a perfect schedule you only follow once.