Phones go to bed dirty. They’ve been in your hands, on tables, in pockets, collecting bacteria all day, and they usually charge on a nightstand next to where you sleep without ever being cleaned. UV sanitizers exist, but most are clinical white boxes that feel more like medical equipment than something you’d want on your bedside table, and they rarely do anything beyond sterilization.

The Phone Toaster is a charging and sterilization device designed by DIVE for Aprill x Stone that borrows the form and ritual of an analog toaster. You slide your phone into a vertical slot at the top before bed, and the device charges it, sterilizes it with what’s likely UV light inside the chamber, and then “delivers” it back with an alarm in the morning, like toast popping up when it’s ready.

Designers: Minki Kim, Kyumin Hwang (DIVE Design)

The bedtime ritual is straightforward. You drop your phone into the slot, pull the front slider down like a toaster lever, and the device takes over. Inside, the phone charges while UV light cycles through to kill surface bacteria. A digital clock on the front keeps time, and the base glows with a soft, indirect LED ring that casts pastel light from underneath, making the space feel cozier instead of clinical before you turn off the lights.

When the alarm goes off in the morning, the device notifies you that your phone is fully charged and sterilized, ready to start another day. The scenario is meant to mirror the experience of making toast, inserting something, waiting, and getting it back transformed. Instead of bread that’s warm and crispy, you get a phone that’s clean and charged, which is a surprisingly fitting metaphor when you think about it.

The controls lean into that toaster language. Two small buttons on the top handle alarm and brightness settings, while the front slider and round, glossy knob feel tactile and familiar. The strong contrast between the matte, textured body and the shiny button gives the small form a bit of personality, making it read more like a playful bedside object than a piece of tech that’s just doing a job quietly in the background.

Color options include pastel blue, beige, yellow-orange, sage green, and gray, all meant to appeal to millennials who want their gadgets to reflect their personality instead of just sitting there in generic black or white. The soft hues and bottom lighting are designed to make the toaster feel like part of a calm nighttime routine rather than another device demanding attention.

Phone Toaster reframes phone sterilization and charging as a small bedtime ritual instead of something you forget about or do with a tangle of cables. Borrowing the toaster’s form, controls, and even the “pop” delivery moment, it makes putting your phone away at night feel intentional and a bit playful. The design is a gentle nudge that says hygiene tech doesn’t have to look clinical to be taken seriously.