💡 After 4 focus sessions, take a long break
💡 One session = 1 unit of deep work
💡 Remove distractions before starting
The Pomodoro Timer uses the proven Pomodoro Technique — 25 minutes of focused work followed by a 5-minute break. After 4 rounds, take a longer break. Track your daily sessions and focus minutes to build a productive routine.
A simple Pomodoro plan
Before starting, choose one task small enough to finish or move forward in 25 minutes. Put your phone away, close unrelated tabs, start the timer, and work until the session ends. During the 5-minute break, stand up, drink water, or clear your head instead of starting another distracting task.
Best tasks for Pomodoro sessions
Writing a section of an article, essay, proposal, or email.
Reviewing notes for a class or exam.
Cleaning a small area without turning it into an all-day project.
Programming one bug fix, one component, or one test case.
Processing a short batch of admin work such as invoices or messages.
Common mistake
The timer cannot create focus by itself. The real value comes from deciding what you will work on before the clock starts and protecting that single task until the session ends.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Pomodoro Technique?
A time management method created by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s. Work for 25 minutes, take a 5-minute break, repeat. Named after a tomato-shaped kitchen timer.
Why does the Pomodoro method work?
It creates urgency (the ticking clock), breaks work into manageable chunks, builds in rest to avoid burnout, and makes abstract tasks feel concrete.
Can I change the work/break durations?
Some people prefer 50/10 or 90/20 splits. Experiment to find what works best for your focus span.
Should I stop mid-Pomodoro if interrupted?
Ideally yes — restart the timer. The unbroken focus period is the whole point. Note the interruption and deal with it after the session if possible.