No Devices at Dinner: Why This One Rule Is Worth the Effort
The no devices at dinner rule sounds simple. And it is simple — conceptually. The practice of it, when everyone’s used to having a device at hand, is a bit harder. But this is one of the most reliably impactful family technology habits you can build, and it’s worth the short-term friction.
What You’re Actually Protecting
Meals together are one of the few predictable daily windows where your family is in the same place, not otherwise occupied, and can actually talk. For primary school kids, that dinner table conversation is where they practise social skills, hear how adults navigate the world, and feel like part of a unit.
Devices at meals don’t just distract from conversation — they signal that whatever’s on the screen is more interesting than the people in the room. That signal lands with kids whether you intend it or not.
Apply the Rule to Everyone
This is non-negotiable. If your phone is at the table, the rule means nothing. If your partner is checking messages during dinner, the rule means nothing.
Make it a household rule, not a children’s rule. Phones go somewhere else before you sit down. That’s the standard, and it applies to everyone. When your child sees you putting your phone away, the rule carries weight it doesn’t carry when you’re enforcing it only on them.
Deal With the Initial Resistance
If you’ve never had this rule and you’re introducing it, expect some resistance — particularly from older primary school kids and teenagers. Introduce it as a family decision, explain why, and hold it calmly through the first couple of weeks.
Resistance that’s met with calm, consistent follow-through tends to resolve. Resistance that’s negotiated or accommodated tends to grow.
Make the Conversation Worth Having
A dinner table without devices is only as good as the conversation that fills it. If dinner is silent or dominated by one person, removing devices doesn’t automatically fix that.
Have a few questions up your sleeve. “What’s something that surprised you today?” “If you could change one thing about your day, what would it be?” “What are you looking forward to this week?” These prompts take five seconds to ask and usually produce real conversation.
Extend the Idea to Other Meals
Once dinner is established, consider extending the no-devices approach to breakfast — particularly on school days, when the morning window is one of the few relaxed moments before the day starts. A calm, connected breakfast is worth protecting.
What If Your Family Is in the Middle of Something?
The exceptions question comes up quickly: what about a big sporting event on TV? What if there’s something genuinely urgent? Handle exceptions explicitly and rarely. “We’re making an exception tonight because [X]” is fine occasionally. It’s the default exceptions — “just this once” becoming always — that erode the rule.
Your Practical Takeaway
At your next family dinner, put all devices in the kitchen before you sit down. All of them, including yours. Have one question ready to ask once you’re seated. Notice what happens when the devices aren’t there. That one dinner gives you real information about what you’ve been missing — and what you’ll get back if you make it a habit.
[INTERNAL LINK: For a complete approach to your family’s technology use, read our guide on family technology rules to build a system that makes the dinner rule feel like part of something coherent.]