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Timeboxing

Time management method where a fixed maximum time is allocated to an activity in advance, then that activity is completed within that time frame. Originally from Agile software development, now widely used for productivity.

Last updated: 2026-03-21 04:30

Overview

Timeboxing is a scheduling method where a fixed maximum time is allocated to an activity or task in advance, and that activity must be completed within the defined time frame. Originally designed for Agile software development (particularly Scrum), timeboxing has evolved into a versatile productivity tool applicable across various fields.

Key Principles

Origins

How It Differs from Time Blocking

Time Blocking: Reserves time on calendar for specific activities

Timeboxing: Adds a hard deadline - task must be completed within the allocated time

Timeboxing is a work/break cycle (e.g., 25m work/5m break in Pomodoro), while time blocking is scheduling blocks on calendar.

Benefits

Common Timeboxing Methods

Pomodoro Technique: 25-minute work blocks with 5-minute breaks

52/17 Rule: 52 minutes of work, 17 minutes of break

Sprint Planning: 2-week timeboxes in Agile development

Meetings: Strict 25 or 50-minute meeting timeboxes

Applications

Tools Supporting Timeboxing

Best Practices

Related Concepts

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