Introducing TimeRecord
June 25, 2026
Most time trackers fail for the same reason: they ask you to remember. Remember to start the clock, remember what you were doing, remember to write a note. By the time you sit down to invoice a client, half the week is a blur and you're rounding to the nearest "felt like about two hours."
TimeRecord takes a different approach. You start a timer for a Client → Project → Task, then you just work. In the background, the extension quietly records the root domains of the sites you used during that session — figma.com, github.com, notion.so — so every entry comes with built-in proof of work. No manual notes, no reconstructing your day from memory.
Honest hours, automatically
Step away from the computer and TimeRecord notices. After eight minutes of inactivity it auto-pauses and asks whether to keep or discard the idle time. You never accidentally bill a coffee break, and you never lose real work either.
When the week is done, export a clean Excel timesheet — one row per session, with the client, project, task, duration, and the domains you touched. It's the kind of timesheet a client can actually trust.
Free where it counts
The core tracker is free and works entirely offline: one client, three projects, unlimited tasks, automatic domain capture, idle detection, and Excel export. If you never sign in, nothing ever leaves your browser.
When you're ready for more — unlimited clients and projects, cross-device sync, full history, analytics, PDF reports, and invoicing — that lives in the web app on the Pro plan.
Add TimeRecord to your browser and bill the hours you actually worked.

