The Attention Cost of Notifications, Examined
By Maksym Bardakh · Co-founder & President
In short
Each notification draws on a shared attention budget and interrupts whatever the person was doing, including thought. The cost is not the second it takes to glance but the working-memory state it disrupts and the trust it spends. Products that treat notifications as scarce, time them to the user’s context, and let people tune them keep more of them enabled in the long run.
The real cost is the interruption
It is tempting to measure a notification by the time it takes to read. The larger cost is the interruption to whatever the person was holding in mind. Returning to an interrupted task is not instant. The person must reconstruct context, and some of what was in working memory is simply lost. A notification that arrives during focused work can cost far more than the few seconds it appears to take.
This is why a steady stream of low-value notifications is corrosive even when each one is individually small. The aggregate is a pattern of repeated interruption that fragments attention and trains the person to either ignore the channel or turn it off.
Relevance and timing are the levers
A notification justifies its interruption only when it is relevant now. The two questions that matter are whether the information is worth interrupting for and whether this is the right moment to deliver it. Batching non-urgent items, respecting quiet hours, and holding messages until the person is likely receptive all reduce the cost without losing the value.
- Reserve interruptive delivery for information that is genuinely time-sensitive.
- Batch low-urgency updates rather than sending them one by one.
- Honor quiet hours and the user’s stated availability.
Trust is the budget being spent
Every notification spends a little of the user’s trust in the channel. Send too many low-value ones and the person learns that the channel is not worth attending to. Once that lesson is learned, even important notifications are ignored or the whole category is disabled. The long-term metric that matters is not how many notifications were sent but how many remained enabled.
Key takeaways
- The cost of a notification is the interrupted working-memory state, not the glance.
- A stream of small low-value notifications is corrosive in aggregate.
- Deliver interruptively only when information is both worth it and timely.
- Batch non-urgent items and respect quiet hours.
- Notifications spend trust; the metric that matters is how many stay enabled.
Frequently asked questions
- Why are notifications more costly than they appear?
- The cost is not the time to read one but the interruption to working memory, which forces the person to reconstruct lost context when returning to a task.
- How can a product reduce notification cost without losing value?
- By sending interruptive notifications only for genuinely time-sensitive information, batching low-urgency items, and respecting quiet hours.
- What is the right success metric for notifications?
- How many notifications people keep enabled over time, not how many were delivered, because excess volume causes users to disable entire channels.
References
About the author
Maksym Bardakh
Co-founder & President
Maksym is a software engineer and product strategist focused on executive-function and behavioral system design. At BBMM he leads product direction across Flowo, TextPack, and Pillow, working at the intersection of human cognition and durable interface design.