Getting out of bed—switching from the coziness of sleep to the jarring reality of the day—can be a challenge for anyone. But, as the saying goes, there’s an app for that. Or, in this case, several apps—ones that go above and beyond the default options in Android and iOS to make sure you wake up when you need to.
From alarms that get you to complete a challenge—and fully regain consciousness—before they’ll turn off, to alarms that are timed to fit in with your natural circadian rhythm, there’s plenty of choice when it comes to getting some assistance in starting the day.
Alarmy
Alarmy gives you missions to complete to stop your alarm.
Credit: Lifehacker
Attention, heavy sleepers: Alarmy is on a mission to get you out of bed in the morning, and promises that it’ll never fail to wake you up. The main way it does this is by getting you to complete a challenge—like a math, typing, or memory task—before it’ll shut up, which means you really do have to force yourself to start thinking and get yourself out of bed.
That’s not all the app has to offer, either; you can pick from a variety of sounds to wake yourself up, set customized alarm screens that encourage you to face the day (think kittens and sunrises), and track your sleep overnight—just make sure your phone is near your pillow. When you wake, you can be greeted by a sleep analysis report.
Features like an extra-loud setting for alarms and persistent time reminders while you’re thinking about hitting snooze—or gentle volume increases, if you want to be kinder to yourself—put Alarmy a level above most other alarm clock apps out there. It uses a freemium model, with all of the various features available for $5 a month or $60 a year. Alarmy is available for Android and iOS.
Sleep as Android
Sleep as Android offers a host of options for waking up.
Credit: Lifehacker
There are a host of settings to explore when it comes to configuring alarms in Sleep as Android: You can have the app wake you up at a time you’ll feel most refreshed, you can set up a captcha challenge to force you awake, and you can set a wake-up check that makes sure you’ve risen—and if you haven’t, your alarm starts ringing again.
There is also a range of different alarm sounds to pick from, as well as a gentle wake-up mode that gives you an easier segue out of slumber. Snoozing is still permitted, if you want to keep it as an option, but here too you can set limits if you think you’ll rely on it too much. The app is difficult to beat in terms of how customizable the alarms are.
However, alarms aren’t even the primary focus of Sleep as Android: It’s mainly designed to be a comprehensive sleep tracker, and it handles this just as well too (just leave your phone on your bed). You can use the app for free, but the full set of features will set you back $5 a month or $50 a year. As its name suggests, Sleep as Android is only available for Android.
Loud Alarm Clock
The alarms in Loud Alarm Clock can be extensively customized.
Credit: Lifehacker
Loud Alarm Clock brings with it several tricks to ensure you don’t sleep in any longer than you should, including boosted audio that goes above and beyond whatever volume setting you’ve got on your iPhone to really make a racket. If standard alarms can’t rouse you from a deep sleep, then Loud Alarm Clock is definitely worth trying instead.
It’s not just the volume boosting that helps here, because the app also offers some excruciating sounds as options for the alarm audio—think nails on a chalkboard and a car alarm, for example. If that’s too grating, there are friendly voice options you can turn to instead as alarm sounds.
Other features include the ability to limit snoozing time, so you don’t go past a certain time, the option to randomize alarm sounds so you don’t get used to them, and a choice of wallpaper backgrounds to help you get the day started. Loud Alarm Clock is free to try and use, but you can pay a one-off fee of $8 to remove the ads and get more sound options. The app is only available for iOS.
Talking Alarm Clock Beyond
Have your alarms speak to you with Talking Alarm Clock Beyond.
Credit: Lifehacker
Talking Alarm Clock Beyond eschews the traditional alarm clock sounds to give you a motivational talking-to when you wake up—the idea being that you’re more inclined to get yourself up and out of bed if you’re being told to seize the day, rather than having your sleep interrupted by a shrill beeping that your brain has come to recognize as annoying.
You can customize the message you hear when the alarm goes off, and the app comes with challenges you can set yourself to do to make the talking stop: You can solve a math problem, for example, or complete a captcha, or walk a certain distance with your phone. By the time you’ve managed to dismiss the alarm, you should find yourself fully awake.
There are plenty of nice extras included here as well, including the “mayday mode” that adds an extra level of volume to make sure you really do realize you have to get out of bed, as well as timer, world clock, and stopwatch features. You can use everything in Talking Alarm Clock Beyond, but there is a one-off fee of $3 if you’d like to get rid of the ads. You can find the app on Android.
Sleep Cycle
Sleep Cycle will wake you up at the right time for you.
Credit: Lifehacker
The clue is in the name: Sleep Cycle is focused on making sure you wake up at the right time, in harmony with your body’s natural rhythms (within the constraints of work and other responsibilities, of course). As well as getting you up in the morning, there are also tools (like sounds and exercises) to get you to sleep more easily.
During the night, Sleep Cycle can monitor your movement and any sounds you make to assess the quality and stages of your sleep, and it’ll give you advice on improving your sleeping habits as well. In the morning, within a window you’ve previously set, it can wake you up gradually and smoothly in your lightest sleep phase, with your choice of audio.
It’s a full-on sleep helper and enhancer, complete with goal setting and tracking—and the alarm clock is a crucial part of it. Everything is wrapped up in a clean and intuitive interface that’s easy to navigate. You can try Sleep Cycle for free for a week to see if it’s helpful—after that, you need to pay $10 a month or $40 a year to keep using it. Download Sleep Cycle on Android or iOS.