Short timers (under 5 minutes)
Press start for a full-screen 1-minute timer that counts down 01:00 and rings a loud alarm when it reaches zero. You can pause and resume it, reset it, and the countdown keeps running accurately even if you switch tabs or your screen dims. No sign-up, nothing to install.
Ready · 1-minute timer
A one-minute timer is the smallest unit that still feels like a deliberate block of time rather than a reflex. It is long enough to make a point and short enough that nobody resents being held to it. Sixty seconds is the canonical limit for an elevator pitch, a plank, a round of speed cleaning, or the rest between heavy lifting sets.
People are surprisingly bad at counting a minute in their heads. Most adults guess somewhere between 40 and 75 seconds when asked to mark a minute with their eyes closed, and stress shortens the estimate further. That is exactly why an external one-minute timer is useful: in the situations where a minute matters most — a timed exercise, a pitch, a child's turn — adrenaline makes your internal clock run fast, so you cut things short. Offloading the count to the timer lets you commit to the full sixty seconds instead of the forty your brain thinks have passed.
Most browser timers drift, because they count by accumulating small ticks, and browsers deliberately slow those ticks down in background tabs to save battery. This one is different: the moment you press start it records the exact wall-clock time the countdown should end, and every frame it simply measures how long is left until that fixed end time. If you switch tabs, lock your phone, or the tab is throttled, the remaining time is recomputed from the real clock the instant you come back, so a 1-minute timer is still a 1 minutes timer rather than however long the throttled ticks happened to add up to. On phones the page asks for a screen wake lock while the countdown is running, where the browser allows it, so the display does not sleep mid-count. The alarm is synthesised in the browser with the Web Audio API, which means there is no audio file to download and the chime is ready the moment you start.
Need a different length? These are the timers people most often reach for alongside a 1-minute timer:
Browse the full set of countdown timers, or switch tools: the Pomodoro timer loops work and break intervals automatically, the online stopwatch counts up with laps, the alarm clock rings at a specific time of day, and the countdown maker counts down to a future date you can share or embed.