Pomodoro
Timer

Stay focused with timed work sessions and scheduled breaks. Customize your intervals, track completed pomodoros, and maintain deep focus with structured intervals.

Work
25:00
0 completed

Settings

Work25 min
Short Break5 min
Long Break15 min
Auto-start next phase

Learn more

Why does the 25-minute interval work so well for focus?

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Frequently Asked Questions

The Pomodoro Technique is a time-management method developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s. Work is divided into focused intervals — traditionally 25 minutes — separated by short breaks. After four intervals, a longer break of 15-30 minutes is taken. The goal is to reduce mental fatigue and maintain consistent output.

Yes. Open the Settings panel and adjust the Work, Short Break, and Long Break fields to any duration from 1 minute upward. Changes take effect at the start of the next phase. Settings cannot be edited while a session is running.

A three-tone chime plays through your browser using the Web Audio API when any phase completes. No external audio files are required. If your browser has autoplay blocked or the Web Audio API is unavailable, the sound will silently skip.

Enable Auto-start next phase in Settings. When active, the timer moves straight from one phase to the next without requiring you to press Start again.

Skip ends the current phase immediately and advances to the next one without playing the completion chime. If you skip a work session, it still counts as a completed pomodoro for the purpose of the long-break cycle.

Every four completed work sessions trigger a long break instead of a short one. The 🍅 dots below the timer show your progress within the current set of four.