The Education & Learning Blog
The Education & Learning Blog
When it comes to building a study routine that sticks, willpower alone often isn’t enough. You sit down with the best of intentions, but somehow the hours slip away, your books remain closed, and guilt creeps in. If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. Many students struggle with consistency. That’s where habit stacking comes in—a science-backed strategy that can help you build study routine habits that actually last.
In this article, you’ll learn what habit stacking is, why it works, and how you can apply it to your own learning life to create meaningful, sustainable change.
Habit stacking is a technique popularised by James Clear in his book Atomic Habits. The idea is simple but powerful: you take a habit you already do consistently and pair it with a new habit you want to adopt. By piggybacking off an established behaviour, you make it easier to remember and follow through on the new habit.
Let’s say every morning you make a cup of tea. That’s your existing habit. Now, you want to get into the habit of reviewing flashcards for 5 minutes. With habit stacking, your routine becomes: “After I make my tea, I will review flashcards for 5 minutes.”
Why does this work? Because the brain thrives on patterns. When your new habit is tied to something automatic, it’s more likely to stick.
Understanding why habit stacking works involves understanding how habits form. According to behaviour science, habits consist of a cue, routine, and reward.
By linking a new study habit to an existing cue, you’re creating a shortcut in your brain. You’re not relying on motivation. You’re relying on structure. This makes study routine habits more resilient and less prone to failure.
Make a list of things you already do daily. These could include:
These are all anchor points where you can attach a new study habit.
Avoid going too big. Instead, pick something you can do in 2–5 minutes. For example:
James Clear recommends using the structure: “After [current habit], I will [new habit].”
Examples:
Once the habit feels automatic, you can expand it. Reading one page becomes five. Reviewing flashcards for 2 minutes becomes 10. Consistency comes first, then intensity.
Here are some practical times to stack new learning habits:
If the habit you stack onto isn’t stable, your new habit won’t be either. Always choose a reliable, daily behaviour.
You don’t need to study for an hour straight away. Start small and grow gradually. The goal is not perfection, but progress.
Even 2 minutes of focused effort is a success. Celebrate it. Your brain thrives on rewards, and even a mental “Well done!” helps reinforce the routine.
“I always scrolled through Instagram after breakfast. Now, I do five flashcards before I check my phone. It’s surprisingly doable and I feel way better starting my day with learning.”
“I stack my lecture review onto my train ride. As soon as I sit down, I open my notes app. No more wasted commute time, and it’s helped me feel less overwhelmed before exams.”
These stories show how habit stacking fits around your real life. It doesn’t demand massive change—just thoughtful tweaks.
Habit stacking works because it removes the pressure of willpower. Instead of wrestling with your brain, you gently lead it in the right direction. By linking small study actions to everyday habits, you can build a routine that feels natural, manageable, and empowering.
You don’t need to overhaul your entire life. Just pick one habit. One anchor. One step.
What will your first study habit stack be?
Leave a comment below and let us know! Or share this with a friend who needs a study boost.
Your success starts with a simple stack. Let’s get started.