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Five-Minute Rule

A cognitive behavioral therapy technique for overcoming procrastination by committing to work on a dreaded task for just five minutes. Most people find that after starting with this small commitment, momentum builds and they continue working well beyond the initial five minutes, making it easier to overcome the initial resistance to starting.

Last updated: 2026-03-16 10:44

Overview

The 5-Minute Rule is a cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) technique designed to help people overcome procrastination. Using this rule, you set a goal of doing whatever task you've been avoiding, but you only commit to doing it for a set amount of time: five minutes. This approach removes the overwhelming feeling of having to complete an entire task and makes starting much more manageable.

How It Works

The Basic Principle

Commit to working on a task you've been avoiding for just five minutes. After five minutes:

The Psychology Behind It

Most people find that after five minutes of doing something, it's easy to continue until the task is done. The hardest part is usually setting the intention and starting—once you're engaged, momentum takes over.

Why It Works

  1. Lowers the Barrier: Five minutes feels manageable, even for tasks you dread
  2. Defeats Perfectionism: You don't have to do it perfectly, just for five minutes
  3. Builds Momentum: Getting started is the hardest part; continuation is easier
  4. Reduces Anxiety: Breaking overwhelming tasks into tiny commitments
  5. Exploits the Zeigarnik Effect: Once started, our brains want to complete unfinished tasks

Implementation Steps

Step 1: Identify the Task

Choose a task you've been procrastinating on—something you know you should do but have been avoiding.

Step 2: Set a Timer

Set a timer for exactly five minutes. This creates a concrete, bounded commitment.

Step 3: Start Working

Begin the task with the mindset that you only need to work for five minutes—no more.

Step 4: Evaluate After Five Minutes

When the timer goes off:

Step 5: Celebrate the Start

Even if you stop after five minutes, you've overcome inertia and made progress.

Use Cases

Common Applications

Who Benefits Most

Comparison with Similar Techniques

vs. Two-Minute Rule (David Allen)

vs. Two-Minute Rule (James Clear)

vs. Pomodoro Technique

Tips for Success

Make It Even Easier

Build on Success

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  1. Don't Pressure Yourself: The rule only requires five minutes, not completion
  2. Don't Skip the Timer: Setting a timer creates psychological safety
  3. Don't Judge Yourself: If you stop at five minutes, that's still success
  4. Don't Over-Plan: Just start; planning can become procrastination

Scientific Basis

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

This technique is rooted in CBT principles of behavioral activation—taking action even when you don't feel motivated, which often shifts your emotional state.

The Zeigarnik Effect

Once we start a task, our brains experience tension until it's completed, making continuation more likely than stopping.

Activation Energy

Starting requires the most mental energy (activation energy). Once in motion, continuing requires less energy (like physics).

Real-World Examples

Example 1: Exercise Avoidance

Example 2: Writing Project

Example 3: Household Chores

Limitations & When to Use Other Methods

When Five-Minute Rule Works Best

When to Use Other Methods

Key Takeaways

  1. The hardest part is starting — the Five-Minute Rule makes starting easy
  2. Momentum is powerful — most people continue beyond five minutes
  3. Lower the barrier — any start is better than no start
  4. Remove the pressure — you only commit to five minutes
  5. Trust the process — getting started almost always leads to continuation

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