You need a timer right now: the pasta is in, you have ten minutes to make a call, or you want to box a task to thirty minutes. The fastest answer is a browser timer that loads instantly and shouts at you when time runs out. Set the hours, minutes and seconds, press start, and the online timer counts down with a clear sound and a flashing screen the moment it reaches zero.
No download, no account, no waiting. It runs on your own device, so once the page has loaded it keeps going even offline.
Set the time the way that suits the task
Type in the exact hours, minutes and seconds for an odd interval like 7 minutes 30 seconds, or tap a preset for the everyday ones. A 5-minute tea, a 25-minute focus block, a 1-minute plank: those live a single tap away so you are not fiddling with inputs while something is on the stove.
The big readout is meant to be glanced at from across the room. The browser tab title updates too, so if you are working in another window you can see the time left without switching back.
Start, pause, and never lose your place
Press start and the countdown begins. If the phone rings or someone walks in, pause holds the remaining time and resume carries on from the exact second you stopped. That matters when you are timing something you cannot simply restart, like a rest interval or a baking step you have already partly committed to.
When it hits zero the screen flashes and the alarm sounds until you stop it. There is no guesswork about whether it finished while you were looking away.
What people use it for
A browser timer fits the small, frequent jobs better than reaching for a phone:
- Cooking and baking. Pasta, eggs, a roast resting, tea steeping. Set it and walk away.
- Timeboxing. Give a task a hard 25 minutes so it does not quietly eat your afternoon.
- Speaking and practice. Rehearse a talk to length, or run a timed exam question.
- Breaks and movement. A nudge every hour to stand up, stretch, or rest your eyes.
Why the timing holds up
A common worry with browser timers is drift: you set ten minutes, look back, and somehow it is off. This one avoids that by anchoring the countdown to a fixed end moment and working out the remaining time against the clock, rather than counting ticks that a busy browser might delay. The number you see is the number that is true, even after the tab has been in the background for a while.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Closing the tab and expecting it to ring. The alert needs the page open to play. Minimise the window or switch tabs if you like, but do not close it.
- Muting the device. The visual flash still fires, but if you want the sound, check the device is not on silent and the tab is not muted.
- Reaching for a date countdown instead. If you are counting down to a moment next week rather than a length of minutes, use the countdown timer, which anchors to a calendar date.
When you want to structure a longer stretch of work rather than time a single task, the Pomodoro timer splits it into focus blocks with breaks built in.