25:00
Deep focus

Take a real break — stretch, drink water, or
check your daily calorie target while you rest.

Session complete! Well done.
0 Sessions
0m Focused
0 Done
Focus:
Today's tasks 0 / 0
Add tasks above and click them to set as active during your focus session.
Today's progress
Focus sessions 0 / 8
Focus time 0 / 200 min
Tasks completed 0 / 5
"The secret of getting ahead is getting started."
— Mark Twain

Free Pomodoro Timer — Build Unbreakable Focus

The Fasturious Focus Timer is a free online Pomodoro technique timer with a built-in task manager. No sign-up, no download, no ads interrupting your session. Just open the page and start focusing.

The Pomodoro Technique was developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s. The method is simple: work for 25 minutes with full focus, take a 5-minute break, then repeat. Every 4 sessions, take a longer 15-minute break. This rhythm works with your brain's natural attention cycles — not against them.

How to use this timer

  • Add your tasks for the day in the task panel on the right
  • Click a task to set it as your active focus target
  • Press the play button to start your 25-minute focus session
  • When the timer ends, take your break — the timer auto-switches
  • After 4 sessions, enjoy a longer 15-minute break
  • Check off tasks as you complete them

Why the Pomodoro Technique Works

Research on attention and cognitive performance consistently shows that the human brain cannot sustain deep focus for more than 45–90 minutes without a significant drop in performance. The Pomodoro Technique uses this science by breaking work into focused sprints with mandatory recovery periods.

  • Beats procrastination — Starting is the hardest part. Committing to just 25 minutes feels manageable.
  • Reduces mental fatigue — Scheduled breaks prevent the burnout that comes from long, uninterrupted work sessions.
  • Improves time awareness — Tracking sessions helps you understand how long tasks actually take.
  • Creates urgency — A ticking timer activates a mild time pressure that sharpens focus.

Frequently Asked Questions

The Pomodoro Technique is a time management method that breaks work into 25-minute focused intervals (called "pomodoros") separated by short 5-minute breaks. After every 4 pomodoros, you take a longer break of 15–30 minutes. It was created by Francesco Cirillo in the 1980s and is one of the most researched productivity methods in the world.

Yes — use the duration buttons below the timer to switch between 20, 25, 45, or 60-minute focus sessions. The 25-minute default is ideal for most tasks. Use 45 or 60 minutes for deep work sessions that require longer warm-up time, such as coding, writing, or complex analysis.

Your tasks and daily statistics are saved in your browser's local storage — they persist between page refreshes on the same device. No account or sign-up is needed. Data resets at the start of each new day automatically.

Most productivity researchers recommend 8–12 pomodoros as a realistic daily target for knowledge workers. That equals 3.5–5 hours of pure focused work, which is considered a very productive day. More than 16 sessions per day is generally unsustainable without quality declining.