Show HN: Turn impulse buys into dream investments

8 pjcodes 5 8/3/2025, 6:15:53 PM nopeit.app ↗
Hi HN, I’ve always struggled with impulse buying—that late-night Amazon scroll or the "deal" that's too good to pass up. I realized I was trading long-term goals for short-term dopamine hits. The core problem is the frictionlessness of modern e-commerce.

To fight back, I built Nope It. It’s not just another budgeting app. It's a PWA designed to interrupt the impulse loop at the critical moment.

How it works is based on a few key psychological principles:

Forced Pause (The Cooldown): Inspired by Daniel Kahneman's "Thinking, Fast and Slow," the app introduces a mandatory 24-hour cooldown on any logged impulse. This shifts you from impulsive "System 1" thinking to deliberate "System 2" thinking.

Cost Re-framing (Work Hours Psychology): It immediately translates the item's price into a more tangible metric: This $80 gadget costs you 4 hours of your work. This technique, known as "opportunity cost visualization," makes the trade-off much more real.

Goal Redirection: Instead of just saying "no," the app encourages you to immediately contribute the saved amount to a pre-defined Wishlist Goal (e.g., "Vacation Fund," "Down Payment"). This replaces the lost dopamine from buying with the positive feeling of making progress.

The Tech:

It's built as an enterprise-grade behavioral platform, but the front-end is a simple, fast Progressive Web Application (PWA) so there's nothing to install. It's accessible on any device, instantly.

I wanted to turn a personal weakness into a strength and thought others might find it useful too. I'm here to answer any questions about the psychology, the tech, or the journey.

Would love to get your feedback!

Check it out here: https://www.nopeit.app

Comments (5)

dsalzman · 7m ago
echoangle · 2h ago
> Cost Re-framing (Work Hours Psychology): It immediately translates the item's price into a more tangible metric: This $80 gadget costs you 4 hours of your work. This technique, known as "opportunity cost visualization," makes the trade-off much more real.

I already do this automatically myself but this only makes me more likely to buy stuff I want. Because many things are so crazy cheap that the time you need to work for them is really not a lot.

Also, the example on the website says 2.1 weeks of work for $217 sneakers. Is the person on the example earning $400 per month or is the calculation different (for example only considering expendable income)?

rconti · 53m ago
I had this problem when I started budgeting/tracking my money more closely. Turns out I don't spend ENOUGH money on my hobbies! :D
rconti · 51m ago
Under cost re-framing and goal redirection, it might be neat to add something like "how much this amount of money would net you in 5/10 years at 7% growth" for example. (Ties into the down payment category, perhaps).
nihiven · 3h ago
How is the app triggered? There is a graphic that makes it seem like the app can detect impulse buys:

iPhone 16 Pro Max $1,625 IMPULSE DETECTED

I think this is a good idea I'm just not convinced I would manually interrupt my impulse buys to pull up the app to stop my impulse buys. How does the app introduce friction to the purchase process?