Using the 14 Minutes Timer
This timer is already set to 14 minutes. 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.
14 Minutes sits in the short focus block range - about 23.3% of an hour, and 4 of them fit inside an hour. That length suits steeping and cooling tea, a kitchen tidy blitz, or a power-nap window, 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, 14 Minutes is 840 seconds (14 minutes). 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.
How to use 14 Minutes without wasting it
14 Minutes is long enough to make progress but short enough to feel easy to start. Choose one clear task before pressing Start, then stop when the timer ends instead of letting the session sprawl.
A 14 Minutes timer is 23.3% of an hour, so 4 of them fit into 60 minutes. Keep one visible cue nearby: a recipe, workout set, reading page, checklist, or meeting note.
- 14 minutes (840 seconds)
- 4 fit in an hour
- 23.3% of an hour
14 Minutes planning table
| Moment | Use it for | Practical cue |
|---|---|---|
| First part | Get ready for steeping and cooling tea | Open the tab, confirm sound, and remove one distraction. |
| Middle part | Stay with a kitchen tidy blitz | Let the 14 Minutes countdown create a clear boundary. |
| Final part | Close out a power-nap window | Use the alert as a stop signal, not a reason to keep drifting. |
14 Minutes pace checkpoints
A 14 Minutes countdown is easiest to use when it has checkpoints. Think of it as about three blocks of 4 minutes: start the task, stay with the middle, then leave enough time to close it properly.
| Checkpoint | When it happens | What to decide |
|---|---|---|
| Quarter check | 3 minutes 30 seconds after start | 10 minutes 30 seconds left to keep the task moving. |
| Halfway check | 7 minutes after start | 7 minutes left to decide whether to finish or simplify. |
| Final cue | 12 minutes 36 seconds after start | 1 minute 24 seconds left for saving, wiping down, stretching, or stopping cleanly. |
How to make 14 Minutes useful
- Use 14 Minutes for a single named task, not a mixed checklist.
- If the task needs setup, spend no more than 3 minutes 30 seconds preparing before the real work begins.
- At the halfway mark, ask whether the goal still fits inside the remaining 7 minutes.
When this duration is not ideal
Do not pack several unrelated tasks into 14 Minutes. Pick one outcome, such as drafting, cleaning, reading, or exercising.
Pair short timers with the Pomodoro method - Work in focused bursts and take a break when the bell rings.
14 Minutes timer - FAQ
How long is a 14 Minutes timer?
It counts down for exactly 14 Minutes - That's 840 seconds, or 14 minutes.
What is a 14 Minutes timer good for?
It works best as a short focus block for steeping and cooling tea, a kitchen tidy blitz, a power-nap window.
Should I use 14 Minutes or a different timer?
If 14 Minutes is not quite right, try the nearby 5 minutes timer or choose another related countdown below.
Related timers
If 14 Minutes is not quite right, try the nearby 5 minutes 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.