Two-Minute Rule (David Allen)
Getting Things Done principle stating that if an action takes less than two minutes, do it immediately rather than defer it. Based on the efficiency cutoff where organizing a task takes longer than completing it.
Last updated: 2026-03-21 05:48
David Allen's Two-Minute Rule
Coined by David Allen in his book "Getting Things Done," the two-minute rule states: "If an action will take less than two minutes, it should be done at the moment it's defined."
The Rationale
The reasoning is "it's more or less the point where it starts taking longer to store and track an item than to deal with it the first time it's in your hands—in other words, it's the efficiency cutoff."
How It Works
If you determine an action can be done in two minutes, you should do it right then because it'll take longer to organize it and review it than it would be to actually finish it the first time you notice it.
Important Context
David Allen cautioned that "you shouldn't become a slave to spending your day doing two-minute actions. This rule should be applied primarily when you are engaging with new input."
When to Apply
The 2-minute rule should be applied during processing time, such as:
- Going through emails
- Reviewing your inbox
- Assessing your task list
Flexibility
Two minutes is just a guideline. If you have a long open window of time to process your in-tray, you can extend the cutoff to five or ten minutes.
Benefits
- Prevents small tasks from cluttering your task list
- Reduces decision fatigue
- Maintains momentum
- Eliminates overhead of tracking tiny tasks
- Keeps your system clean and focused on important work
Variations
James Clear adapted this rule for habit formation, where it means starting a new habit should take less than two minutes to begin, which is a different application than Allen's original productivity principle.
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