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52-17 Rule

Work-break productivity ratio discovered by DeskTime in 2014 research. Most productive employees work for 52 minutes, then break for 17 minutes. The ratio has evolved to 75/33 in recent studies.

Last updated: 2026-03-07 18:00

Overview

The 52-17 rule is a work-break productivity ratio discovered through research by DeskTime in 2014. The data revealed that the most productive people work for 52 minutes, then break for 17 minutes.

Research Methodology

DeskTime's research looked at the habits of the most productive employees, isolating the top 10% and analyzing their computer usage. The most productive 10% of users have in common their ability to take effective breaks, specifically working for 52 minutes at a time, then breaking for 17 minutes before getting back to it.

Scientific Basis

Focus Duration

Break Duration

Evolution of the Rule

Historical Changes:

Key Findings

The research suggests that:

Implementation

How to Apply:

  1. Set a timer for 52 minutes
  2. Focus completely on your work during this time
  3. When timer rings, take a 17-minute break
  4. Use break for genuine rest (not more work)
  5. Repeat the cycle throughout the day

Effective Break Activities:

Benefits

Productivity Improvements

Mental Health Benefits

Comparison with Other Methods

vs. Pomodoro (25/5)

vs. 90-Minute Ultradian Cycles

Modern Variations

Based on recent research:

Who It's For

Key Insight

The 52-17 rule demonstrates that the most productive people aren't those who work the longest without breaks, but those who work intensely and take regular, meaningful breaks. The rule has evolved over time, showing that optimal work-break ratios adapt to changing work conditions.

Tools for Implementation

Important Notes

Pricing

The methodology itself is free to use. DeskTime and other tracking tools range from free to paid subscriptions.

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