Pomodoro Timer
Stay in flow with focused work sessions and timed breaks — announced out loud so you can keep your eyes on the task, not the clock.
The Pomodoro Technique keeps you productive by splitting work into focused sprints separated by short breaks. The catch is that watching a countdown pulls you out of deep work. Voice Timer solves that: it announces when a focus session ends and a break begins, so you can stay heads-down and trust the timer to tell you when to stop and when to start again.
A standard Pomodoro cycle
25 minutes of focused, single-task work.
Take a longer 15–30 minute break, then start a new cycle.
Make it your own
Prefer 50/10 or 90-minute deep-work blocks? Voice Timer lets you set any focus and break length, choose how many sessions to loop, and add a long break at the end. Add custom spoken cues — like a gentle “halfway” — at exact points inside a session to help you pace.
Works while you work
Timing and voice cues run on-device and continue with the screen locked, so a Pomodoro cycle keeps ticking in the background while you write, code, or study. Save your favourite cycle as a preset and start your next focus block with a single tap.
Build your Pomodoro timer
Frequently asked questions
What is the Pomodoro Technique?
The Pomodoro Technique is a time-management method that breaks work into focused intervals — traditionally 25 minutes — separated by short 5-minute breaks, with a longer break after four sessions. Voice Timer can run this cycle and announce each transition.
What are the standard Pomodoro intervals?
The classic cycle is 25 minutes of focused work, then a 5-minute break, repeated four times, followed by a longer 15–30 minute break. You can adjust all of these lengths in Voice Timer to fit how you work.
Why use a voice timer for Pomodoro?
A spoken cue lets you stay heads-down in your work and step away for breaks without staring at a countdown. Voice Timer announces when a focus session ends and a break begins, so you never lose track of the cycle.
Can I customise the number of sessions?
Yes. Group a focus interval and a break into a loop and repeat it as many times as you like, then add a longer break at the end. Save the whole cycle as a reusable preset.