There's a specific kind of afternoon that many professionals know well. You've been at your desk since 9am, you've been busy the entire time, and yet the list of things you actually moved forward is short. You know roughly where the hours went. Straight into managing your email. And if you're in a client-facing or externally-focused role, this probably costs you more time than most.
Not one long task, just lots of small ones: opening messages, deciding what needs a response, starting replies you don't finish. The fastest way to reduce time spent on email is to stop doing all of it manually. Scheduled checking, short replies, inbox organization, and AI drafting can cut that load significantly. According to Fyxer's Admin Burden Index 2026, a survey of 5,000 UK and US office workers, the average office worker spends 4.3 hours a day on email, and a meaningful chunk of that is recoverable.
This guide covers where the time goes, which habits make the biggest difference, and where it makes sense to stop relying on discipline alone.
Where your email time goes
Before trying to reduce email time, it helps to understand what's eating into it. For most people, it's not any single thing. It's several things happening simultaneously, and they reinforce each other.
1. Volume you can't control
Some of what lands in your inbox is genuinely yours to deal with. A client question. A decision you need to make. A thread you started. But a large share of it isn't. Internal announcements, CC chains you were added to out of habit, newsletters from tools you signed up for two years ago, and notifications from project management platforms that also send you app notifications.
Fyxer works inside Gmail and Outlook to organize your inbox and draft replies before you even open them
Research by Atos Origin found that employees spent 40% of their working week dealing with internal emails that added no real value. You didn’t create most of this, but you’re the one dealing with it.
2. Checking email too often
The average professional checks email around 15 times per day, according to the same Kushlev and Dunn research. That’s roughly every 30 minutes across a standard working day. Each time you switch away from whatever you’re working on to look at your inbox, there’s a cost to getting back, even if you don’t respond to anything. Research on task switching consistently shows that reorienting after an interruption takes longer than the interruption itself.
A well-known study by Kushlev and Dunn, published in Computers in Human Behavior (2015), asked 124 adults to limit their email checks to three times a day for one week, then switch to unlimited checking the following week. The group checking less frequently reported significantly lower daily stress and felt less distracted by email overall. The time saved wasn't the main benefit. The focus was.
3. Writing every email reply from scratch
Most professionals have a handful of email types they write repeatedly. Status updates. Meeting requests. Follow-ups after calls. Responses to common questions. Every time you write one from scratch, you’re spending time on something that doesn’t require fresh thinking. It just feels like it does, because writing is slow and it’s easy to underestimate how much of it you’re doing. For practical techniques, see our guide on how to write emails faster.
4. Trying to sort and respond at the same time
Opening your inbox and immediately trying to act on what's there is one of the most common causes of slow email time. You're doing two separate things at once:
Sorting (figuring out what each email is and whether it needs a response)
Responding (writing the reply)
Doing them together means neither happens cleanly. You get partway through a response, realize you need more information, leave it, come back, and start again.
Email habits that make a difference
There’s a lot of email advice that sounds reasonable and mostly doesn’t work. Inbox zero as a daily practice, elaborate folder structures, or color-coded labels, for example. These approaches place the burden entirely on you and tend to collapse under real email volume.
The following habits are genuinely helpful and easy to implement.
1. Set specific times to check email
This is the most consistently supported change in the research, and also the one that feels most counterintuitive if your inbox is part of how you stay responsive. The concern is that checking less means missing things. In practice, most emails don't require a response within 30 minutes, and the ones that do are usually followed up with a message or a call anyway.
Picking two or three windows in the day to go through your inbox, and closing it in between, changes your relationship with it from reactive to deliberate. You're not less responsive, you're just not at the mercy of whatever arrives next.
2. Separate reading from responding
When you open your inbox, do a first pass to decide what needs a response and what doesn't. Don't start writing, simply sort. Then close anything that doesn't need action, and respond to the remaining messages in a batch. This sounds like a small distinction, but it cuts out the stop-and-start that makes inbox time so inefficient. You're not starting a reply, realizing you need to check something, opening another tab, losing your place, and starting again.
3. Get better at short replies
A lot of email time goes into messages that could be two sentences but end up being eight. The instinct to be thorough is understandable, especially when the email is to someone important. But longer replies tend to generate longer replies. If you can answer something in two sentences without losing clarity or warmth, that's the better version.
It also helps to ask yourself, before writing anything, whether this needs to be an email at all. Some conversations resolve faster over a two-minute call. Some questions are better handled in a shared document. Email is the default, but it's not always the right tool.
4. Deal with email clutter at the source
Unsubscribing from newsletters and notification emails takes about 20 seconds per sender. Most people do it occasionally and then let the list grow back. Setting aside one short session to go through the last month of emails and unsubscribe from anything you’ve been archiving without reading will reduce your daily volume for months. It’s not glamorous, but it’s the kind of thing that pays back every day.
The same logic applies to internal CC habits. If you're being added to threads you don't need to be on, it's worth saying so directly. Most people don't realize they're doing it.
What email habits alone can't fix
The changes above will help. For a lot of people, they'll help a lot. But there's a ceiling to what personal discipline can achieve when the underlying volume is high, and the inbox itself isn't organized.
If your work generates 80 or 100 emails a day, even a perfectly optimized version of your email habits still leaves you with a significant chunk of time spent on sorting and responding. And the sorting part, deciding what's urgent, what can wait, what needs a response, and what's just for your information, is where a lot of time disappears without it feeling like time spent on anything specific.
That's where inbox organization becomes worth thinking about. If your inbox is sorted before you open it, with high-priority messages flagged and everything else already filed, you skip straight to what needs a response.
Consider how long it takes to reply to emails
One of the less obvious time costs in email is the gap between opening a message and sending a reply. You read the email, think about what to say, start writing, edit, and hit send. For a straightforward message, this might take three minutes. For something more complex, or something where the tone matters, it can take fifteen.
Multiply that across the 20 or 30 emails a day that need a response, and drafting is probably where your single biggest block of email time goes.
AI tools that draft replies in your voice are the most direct way to address this. The draft isn't the final email. You still read it, edit it, and make it yours. But starting from something close to what you'd write takes the blank-page problem out of the equation, and most people find that reviewing and adjusting a draft is significantly faster than writing from scratch.
Tools like Fyxer approach this by working in Gmail and Outlook, drafting replies in your tone as emails arrive, so when you open a message there's already something close to what you'd write.
The email time that’s worth keeping
Some email time is worth spending. The message to a client after a difficult call. The reply to someone who's taken the time to write something thoughtful. The follow-up that keeps a deal moving.
The goal isn't to spend as little time as possible in your inbox. It's to spend less time on the part that doesn't need you, so you have more time for the part that does. Sorting notifications. Sorting notifications, triaging threads you were CC'd into by habit, writing the same four replies in slightly different words. None of that requires your judgment.
The ultimate goal is to stop spending your attention on things that don't deserve it.
How to spend less time on email, starting now
Reducing email time comes down to a few things that build up over weeks rather than delivering an immediate fix. For instance, checking on a schedule rather than continuously. Separating reading from responding. Getting the clutter out of your inbox at the source. Writing shorter replies. And, for people with high email volume, getting some of the sorting and drafting work done before you even open a message.
None of this requires a major overhaul. The changes that make the biggest difference are also the smallest ones to implement. The checking schedule takes one decision. Unsubscribing takes 20 minutes. And for high email volume, a drafting tool like Fyxer installs in under a minute.
Reducing time spent on email FAQs
How much time does the average person spend on email?
According to Fyxer’s 2026 Admin Burden Research, conducted with OnePoll, the average office worker spends around 4.3 hours a day on email. Broader estimates put email at between 28% and 40% of the working week depending on role and seniority. In practice, that figure is higher for people in externally facing roles where client and stakeholder communication is a core part of the job. The majority of that time is not spent on high-value communication: research by Atos Origin found that around 40% of working time goes to internal emails that add no real value.
What's the fastest way to reduce time spent on email?
The two changes with the highest immediate impact are switching to scheduled checking windows and separating reading from responding. Both can be implemented in a single day and don’t require any new tools. After that, clearing inbox clutter at the source by unsubscribing from newsletters and notifications delivers cumulative savings over weeks and months. For people with consistently high email volume, an AI drafting tool removes the blank-page problem from every reply and compounds the time saving across every email you send.
Does checking email less frequently actually work?
Yes, and the evidence is clear. A study by Kushlev and Dunn, published in Computers in Human Behavior (2015), found that limiting email checks to three times a day produced significantly lower daily stress than unlimited checking, without reducing responsiveness in any meaningful way. Most emails do not require a reply within 30 minutes, and the ones that do are typically followed up through other channels anyway. The main benefit of checking on a schedule is not the time saved during each check but the focus reclaimed between checks.