Starting a big task is the hard part. A Pomodoro timer shrinks it to something you can begin without dread: just twenty-five minutes, then a break. You commit to one focused block, the timer handles the breaks, and the work gets done in stretches your brain can actually sustain. Press start in the Pomodoro timer and your first focus session begins.
It is free, runs in your browser with no sign-up, and works offline once the page has loaded, so it is there whether you are at a desk or on a train.
Run a focus block
Press start and work for the focus block, twenty-five minutes by default. That length is short enough that almost any task feels approachable and long enough to get properly into it. The tab title shows the time left, so you can keep the window in the background and still know where you are without breaking concentration to check.
Let the breaks happen on their own
When the block ends, a chime sounds and a short break begins automatically. You do not reset anything; the timer rolls into the next phase for you. After a few focus sessions it gives you a longer break instead, the kind you need to actually recover rather than just glance at your phone. If a break interrupts a thought you want to finish, you can skip it, and you can pause the whole cycle whenever something pulls you away.
Watch the sessions add up
A counter logs each completed focus block. It sounds small, but seeing “four sessions done” by lunch is a quiet, honest record of deep work that fills up otherwise. It also helps you plan: if a report takes you six Pomodoros, you can size the next one before you start.
What it is good for
- Studying and revision. Fixed blocks make a daunting syllabus feel finite.
- Writing and coding. Deep work that suffers from interruptions gets a protected window.
- Beating procrastination. “Just one Pomodoro” is a far easier promise to keep than “finish the whole thing.”
- Working from home. Structured breaks stop the day blurring into one long, tired smear.
Tuning it to how you actually work
The default 25/5 rhythm is a starting point, not a rule. If you hit flow and twenty-five minutes feels like an interruption, switch to 50/10 or a 90-minute block. If you are exhausted and twenty-five feels long, shorten it until starting is easy again. Open settings to set the focus length, both break lengths, and how often the long break lands. The right interval is the one you will actually keep returning to.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Skipping every break. The breaks are not slack; they are what keeps the focus blocks sharp. Take them.
- Checking messages during a focus block. A Pomodoro is a promise to do one thing. Save the inbox for the break.
- Setting blocks too long at first. If you keep abandoning sessions, the block is too ambitious. Start shorter and build up.
For a single timed task without the work-and-break structure, the plain online timer is simpler, and the stopwatch is better when you want to measure how long something took rather than count down.