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66-Day Habit Formation Timeline

Research from European Journal of Social Psychology finding it takes an average of 66 days to form a new habit. Critical insight for time tracking adoption and productivity practice implementation, explaining why consistency matters more than perfection.

Last updated: 2026-03-19 14:40

Overview

A 2009 study published in the European Journal of Social Psychology found that it takes an average of 66 days for a new behavior to become automatic—to form a habit. This research has profound implications for adopting time tracking practices and other productivity systems.

The Research

Study Details

What "Habit" Means

Automaticity achieved when:

Implications for Time Tracking

Adoption Timeline

Days 1-20: Conscious Effort

Days 21-45: Building Momentum

Days 46-66: Approaching Automaticity

Day 66+: Habit Formed

Supporting Consistency

Don't Break the Chain Method

Aligns perfectly with 66-day research:

Implementation Tips

Start Simple

Track the Habit

Plan for Obstacles

Application to Productivity Systems

Time Tracking

Other Productivity Habits

Common Pitfalls

Giving Up Too Soon

Expecting Perfection

Too Much at Once

Organizational Adoption

Rolling Out Time Tracking

Success Factors

Key Takeaway

The 66-day habit formation timeline explains why time tracking adoption requires patience and consistency. Organizations and individuals should expect 2-3 months before time tracking becomes automatic, planning support and reinforcement throughout this critical period rather than expecting immediate adoption.

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