Pomodoro Timer

← All Tools / Pomodoro Timer

Pomodoro Timer

Stay focused with 25-minute work sessions and scheduled breaks. No sign-up needed.

25:00
Work Session
Pomodoros
0
Focus Time
0 min
Today's Goal
4 / day

Task List (Today)

    No tasks yet. Add a task to stay focused.

    How the Pomodoro Technique Works

    1. Choose a task to work on
    2. Set the timer to 25 minutes (one Pomodoro)
    3. Work on the task until the timer rings
    4. Take a 5-minute short break
    5. After 4 Pomodoros, take a 15-minute long break
    6. Repeat the cycle throughout your day

    Productivity Tips

    • 📵 Put your phone face-down during work sessions
    • 🚫 Don't check email or social media during a Pomodoro
    • 📝 Write down distracting thoughts — address them later
    • 💧 Use short breaks to hydrate and stretch
    • 🎯 Set a goal for how many Pomodoros to complete per day
    • 📊 Average knowledge worker: 4–8 productive Pomodoros/day

    What is the Pomodoro Technique?

    The Pomodoro Technique is a time management method developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s. Named after a tomato-shaped kitchen timer (pomodoro is Italian for tomato), the technique uses timed work intervals — traditionally 25 minutes — separated by short breaks. Research shows that working in focused sprints with regular breaks reduces mental fatigue, improves sustained concentration, and makes large tasks feel less overwhelming by breaking them into manageable chunks.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Cirillo chose 25 minutes because it's long enough to make meaningful progress on a task but short enough to maintain focus without mental fatigue. Research on ultradian rhythms (90-minute biological cycles) suggests the human brain naturally shifts between high-focus and lower-focus states. Cognitive science suggests attention starts degrading after 20–30 minutes of continuous focus without a break, making 25 minutes an effective default.

    Yes — adjust the Work, Break, and Long Break durations using the fields below the timer. Many people adjust based on their work type: developers often prefer 50/10 cycles for deep coding work; writers sometimes use 45/15. The standard 25/5/15 is the most researched and widely recommended starting point. Experiment to find what works best for your focus style.

    Most knowledge workers realistically complete 4–8 Pomodoros (2–4 hours) of truly focused work per day. Research by Cal Newport and others suggests most people only have about 4 hours of high-quality deep work per day. Cirillo himself suggests 8–12 Pomodoros as a daily ceiling. Track your completed Pomodoros over a week to establish your baseline, then gradually increase.