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14 Minute Timer

Free online 14 minute timer. Great for timed tasks and exercises.

⏱️ 14 Minute Timer: Start a free 14-minute countdown timer instantly — no downloads, no sign-up. Just click Start.

Ready
14 Minute Timer
14:00
Timer
14:00
Alarm

Why use a 14-minute timer?

A 14-minute timer is useful when standard intervals (Pomodoro 25, ultradian 90, NASA nap 26) don't quite match your task. Sits between the 10-minute (4 min above) and 15-minute (1 min below) standards.

What people use a 14-minute timer for

Email triage

A capped 14-minute email session prevents inbox-creep from consuming the day.

Reading session

14-minute of focused reading delivers ~6-15 pages depending on density.

Walking break

A 14-minute walk re-energises better than another coffee for most people.

Mid-length workout

A 14-minute bodyweight circuit covers the essentials on rest days.

Long power nap

Sleep researchers note 14-minute sits between optimal nap and risking sleep inertia.

The 14-minute interval, in context

14-minute sits in the optimal-nap, optimal-task, and optimal-reading zone identified by multiple sleep and productivity research streams.

Sits between the 10-minute (4 min above) and 15-minute (1 min below) standards.

About the 14 Minute Timer

Free online 14 minute timer. Great for timed tasks and exercises.

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Frequently asked questions

Why use a 14-minute timer specifically?

14-minute blocks fit the canonical Pomodoro pattern, single test sections (most AP and SAT subsections fall here), guided meditation cycles, and sustained-work blocks for older students or focused adults. Long enough for deep work, short enough to maintain attention.

Does the 14-minute timer keep accurate time?

Yes. The 14-minute countdown uses monotonic time, so DST transitions, system clock changes, or tab backgrounding do not throw it off. End-of-window accuracy is within a fraction of a second across the full interval.

Should I take a break after each 14-minute session?

Yes. Research on the Pomodoro Technique and ultradian-rhythm work (Sonnentag, 2018) shows that breaks after 14-minute blocks restore the same prefrontal-cortex resources that sustained focus depletes. Skip the break and your next block performs measurably worse.

What happens when the 14-minute timer reaches zero?

The alarm plays and the page flashes. For 14-minute sessions you have likely shifted attention to other work — that audio cue is what brings you back. The alarm is loud enough to be noticeable across a room without being startling.

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