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2 Jun 2025 2:34
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  •   Home > News > International

    How often should you turn off your phone and devices?

    Experts say switching off our phones and devices regularly can help preserve battery life and protect against cyber attacks.


    When was the last time you powered down your phone or laptop?

    If you're like me, the work laptop is switched off at the end of most workdays, unless I'm rushing out the door.

    When it comes to the phone … not so often.

    We asked two technology experts how often we should be turning off our phones and devices, and the risks to battery life and our data if we don't.

    Draining your battery life

    Dr Erica Mealy explains we can think of device shutdowns like cleaning a messy car — relatable.

    "It's a bit like, you have your kids in the car, and they eat in the car, and crumbs start getting everywhere," says Dr Mealy, who is from the Sunshine Coast /Kabi Kabi land.

    "That turn-off is like a reset, getting the vacuum [cleaner] in there, and it's just getting all the crumbs out of the way.

    "When we reset and turn off and turn on, generally, all of that gets cleared out."

    Switching devices off and on can also improv your battery life, according to Dr Mealy.

    "[Your device can be] running lots of things all the time, and it switches in between all of those," she says.

    "You might notice your computer, or your phone gets more sluggish, and that's just because it's trying to keep doing all of these things.

    "If we can shut that down, and some of the extra bits and pieces get shut down with it, then the computer can go, 'Oh, I've got less going on'."

    A good tool for 'digital hygiene'

    She says turning off phones and devices at least weekly is recommended to maintain good digital hygiene.

    "So [digital hygiene] is this idea that you don't store information you don't want to have accidentally leaked," she says.

    Dr Suelette Dreyfus, from Melbourne/Wurundjeri lands, says restarting your devices at least once a week can prompt important software updates such as "patches".

    Patches are small bits of software that stop malware from getting into your iPhone or Android or desktop.

    For Windows machines, these are generally released on the second Tuesday of each month (known as "Patch Tuesday").

    "Some software checks for updates [patches] and downloads them when the device is powered off and on," Dr Dreyfus says.

    "Particularly when you've enabled auto-updates."

    She says sometimes patches are released in response to an identified threat.

    If you want to check your device is up-to-date, Dr Dreyfus says to go to your system control panel and look for updates from your device maker — and run them.

    Change your passwords when you change your toothbrush

    Our experts say closing apps and browsers before turning off a phone or device may also be helpful for security.

    This also applies to private or incognito browsing, which doesn't guarantee that your data can't be found.

    "Your machine can keep this information temporarily in memory while your browser window is active, even if your device is ‘asleep’,' Dr Dreyfus says.

    "Fully powering off a device should remove this material by wiping that volatile memory.

    "If you just put your machine to sleep ... and then you never close the incognito browsing window, then third-party tracking may be alive and well."

    Dr Mealy says this is when you can be susceptible to hackers and data breaches.

    "If you've got multiple tabs open and your browser's set to reopen them when you come in [or turn it back on], sometimes it might not completely clear everything out," she says.

    We should be changing our passwords as often as we're changing our toothbrushes, every three months or once a season, Dr Mealy says.

    "It's annoying, and it's the kind of thing you have to set a reminder for but it can really help in making sure that passwords [which] have been leaked aren't being reused," she says.

    What else can we do?

    Ms Dreyfus also recommends changing your device settings to auto-install manufacturers' patches/updates as soon as they are released.

    "That simple tweak can save you weeks of heartache from having to clean up device infection," she says.

    And it is also recommended to set up multi-factor authentication (a security measure that requires users to provide two or more verification factors to gain access to a resource, such as an online account or application).

    "You need to dip into the settings for all your valuable online accounts and turn it on," she says.

    "Yeah, it's going to take you 15 minutes to set up but then … smooth sailing."


    ABC




    © 2025 ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved

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