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1 Minute Timer

Start a 1 minute countdown in your browser. The timer shows remaining time, supports sound alerts, and works best while the tab stays open.

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Using the 1 Minute Timer

This timer is already set to 1 minute. Press Start Timer when you are ready, keep the browser tab open, and use the sound selector or full-screen view if you need a clearer alert.

1 Minute sits in the quick task range - about 1.7% of an hour, and 60 of them fit inside an hour. That length suits resting between gym sets, a quick tidy-up sprint, or a quick stovetop task, so pick one job before you press Start and let the countdown protect it. When you need a few of these running side by side, the multi-timer keeps them all on one screen.

A timer measures a length, not a clock time. If what you really want is an alert at a set moment - a meeting, a wake-up, a pickup - an online alarm is the better fit, and you can keep both open at once. For anything you would rather measure going up instead of down, like laps or how long a chore actually takes, switch to the stopwatch.

Precisely, 1 Minute is 60 seconds (1 minute). The countdown runs in this browser tab, so keeping the tab open and the device awake is what lets it ring on time - give longer timers a quick sound check before you step away.

What fits inside 1 Minute?

1 Minute gives enough room for one small task without turning it into a project. It works well when the goal is to start, tidy, stretch, cool down, or prepare the next step.

A 1 Minute timer is 1.7% of an hour, so 60 of them fit into 60 minutes. Start with the smallest useful version of the task. If you finish early, let the extra seconds become a buffer instead of adding more work.

  • 1 minute (60 seconds)
  • 60 fit in an hour
  • 1.7% of an hour

1 Minute planning table

Moment Use it for Practical cue
First part Get ready for resting between gym sets Open the tab, confirm sound, and remove one distraction.
Middle part Stay with a quick tidy-up sprint Let the 1 Minute countdown create a clear boundary.
Final part Close out a quick stovetop task Use the alert as a stop signal, not a reason to keep drifting.

1 Minute pace checkpoints

A 1 Minute countdown is easiest to use when it has checkpoints. Think of it as about three blocks of 1 minute: start the task, stay with the middle, then leave enough time to close it properly.

Checkpoint When it happens What to decide
Quarter check 15 seconds after start 45 seconds left to keep the task moving.
Halfway check 30 seconds after start 30 seconds left to decide whether to finish or simplify.
Final cue 50 seconds after start 10 seconds left for saving, wiping down, stretching, or stopping cleanly.

How to make 1 Minute useful

  • Pair this countdown with one visible cue, such as a recipe step, workout set, slide deck, or reading page.
  • If you finish before the bell, use the extra time as buffer and leave the next timer separate.
  • For repeat work, write the task in the timer label so the alert explains why 1 Minute mattered.

When this duration is not ideal

A 1 Minute countdown is too short for deep work. Use it as a starter timer, then switch to 15, 20, or 25 minutes when you are ready to focus.

Pair short timers with the Pomodoro method - Work in focused bursts and take a break when the bell rings.

1 Minute timer - FAQ

How long is a 1 Minute timer?

It counts down for exactly 1 Minute - That's 60 seconds, or 1 minute.

What is a 1 Minute timer good for?

It works best as a quick task for resting between gym sets, a quick tidy-up sprint, a quick stovetop task.

Should I use 1 Minute or a different timer?

If 1 Minute is not quite right, try the nearby 30 seconds timer or choose another related countdown below.

Related timers

If 1 Minute is not quite right, try the nearby 30 seconds timer or choose another related countdown below.

Related guide

Using a timer to stay focused? Learn the best work/break lengths in our guide to the Pomodoro Technique and timer lengths.

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