Pomodoro Timer
Work productively with 25-minute focus sessions and planned breaks. Customizable work and break durations.
POMODORO
25:00
FOCUS
0
COMPLETED
0
MINUTES
Timer Settings (minutes)
The timer continues running even when the browser tab is in the background. Browser permission may be required for notifications.
What Is the Pomodoro Technique and How Does It Work?
Developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s, the Pomodoro Technique divides work into fixed-time blocks to prevent mental fatigue and improve focus quality. The name comes from the tomato-shaped kitchen timer Cirillo used during his university years.
25-Minute Focus (Pomodoro) Sessions
25 minutes has been established as a practical threshold at which the mind can enter deep focus and finish without fatigue. When the end of the task is visible, the brain stops procrastinating and starts working. The tool defaults to 25 minutes; you can change it to 15–50 minutes in the settings panel.
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Step 1
Define Task
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Step 2
Work 25 min
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Step 3
Break 5 min
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Step 4
Long Break after 4th
Short (5 Min) and Long (15-30 Min) Break Cycles
A 5-minute short break after each Pomodoro allows a mental reset. The 15–30 minute long break after every 4 Pomodoros enables deeper recovery. The table below shows sample schedules for different work goals:
| Goal | Pomodoros | Net Work | Short Break | Long Break |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2-hour work session | 4 | 100 min | 15 min | — |
| 4-hour work session | 8 | 200 min | 25 min | 15 min |
| Exam prep (6 hours) | 12 | 300 min | 35 min | 30 min |
Why Is the Pomodoro Technique So Effective?
Preventing Distraction and Procrastination
The main cause of procrastination is not knowing when a task will end. The Pomodoro technique sets a clear 25-minute endpoint, suppressing the brain's "escape" response. Time boxing is also the simplest method to counter Parkinson's Law — the tendency of work to expand to fill the time allocated.
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Time Boxing
Fixed time suppresses the brain's procrastination impulse.
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Single Task
One focus instead of multitasking; quality and speed both improve.
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End in Sight
Knowing it ends in 25 min keeps motivation alive.
Delaying Mental Fatigue (Burnout)
The brain cannot sustain intense focus for hours continuously. Research shows that working with planned breaks produces less mental fatigue than a single long session and does not lead to higher error rates. 8–12 Pomodoros (3–5 hours of net focus) is the sustainable daily limit for most adults.
Tips for Getting the Most Out of the Pomodoro Timer
Preparing a Task List (To-Do) Before the Session
Preparing a to-do list before the Pomodoro starts ensures you know what to think about during the session and prevents decision fatigue. Define only one task per Pomodoro; break large tasks into Pomodoro-sized pieces.
✅ Pick one task and make it concrete (not "write report" but "draft the intro section")
✅ Break large tasks into chunks that fit in 25 minutes
✅ Estimate Pomodoro count in advance (1 Pomodoro ≈ 500–700 words written)
Silencing Phone and Notifications
Every notification pulls attention away from work; the brain may take 15–25 minutes to return to focus mode (the "attention residue" effect). Apply these steps for the duration of the Pomodoro session:
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Phone: Do Not Disturb
Enable Do Not Disturb mode for calls and messages.
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Browser: Close Notifications
Close or hide social media, email and chat tabs.
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Ambient Noise
Headphones with white noise or lo-fi music filter open environments.