All The Ways To Auto-Track Your Time

Time tracking. You either love it or — more likely — you don’t.

After all, who needs another chore? But here’s the thing: it’s not that time tracking itself is hard; it’s the way we’ve been doing it. It’s manual and often requires more attention than the tasks we’re trying to track.

So, what if tracking just… happened? No clicks, no reminders, no extra burden. Because productivity tools shouldn’t get in the way of productivity.

That’s why we’re betting on auto-tracking. It’s not about adding; it’s about subtracting friction, freeing you to focus.

Ready? Let’s see how you can do that with Toggl Track.

📅 Turn Calendar events into time entries with no clicks

Calendar integrations have reportedly helped teams save up to 80 hours per month spent on time tracking.

Integrate with your calendars, enable auto-track for events, and they’ll automatically convert into time entries. Any change on your calendar will automatically sync with Toggl Track.


Toggl Track’s calendar integration with the Auto-track option enabled


SUGGESTED NEXT STEPS

:spiral_calendar: Check out our calendar integrations.

:electric_plug: Integrate with your calendars here.


🌐 Automatically track selected pages with Chrome extensions

We live in our browsers. Most of that time? It’s work. But tracking it has been this clunky ritual: click, start, stop. Rinse and repeat. That’s outdated.

Here’s what you can do: use the Toggl Track Chrome extension and enable “Always Track This Page.” If you’re on a specific webpage — whether it’s your project management tool or an online meeting — the time is automatically tracked.

You control how long you need to be there before the clock starts ticking. Close the tab, and the tracker stops.


Integrations and Auto tracker configurations in Google Chrome extension settings page

🖥️ Track your background activity with desktop apps

The Timeline feature on Desktop apps is the answer to that inevitable question, “What was I doing at 10 a.m.?” When enabled, it automatically records what apps you used, what sites you visited for more than 10 seconds, so at the end of the day, you have a real picture of how it unfolded.

Only you decide which activity turns into time entries. Until then, your data remains private to you.


How to Enable the Timeline Feature

  • Windows Desktop App: On the main Timer screen, go to the “Calendar” tab, click on the three dots, and enable “Record activity.”
  • macOS Desktop App: Open Preferences (⌘ ,) → Calendar, and select your tracking level under “Activity recording.” Update your System Preferences to allow tracking of window titles, and enable “sync local activity” if you want this data available across other Toggl Track apps.

Viewing Timeline data in the web app

In the web app, Timeline data appears in two areas:

1. In the Timer page

Under Extra Visualizations, select “Activity Timeline” to see your last seven days of Timeline activity in 15-minute increments. This view lets you hover over each interval for a detailed breakdown.


Toggl Track’s timeline visualization

2. Calendar View

Timeline entries appear as “pills” on the Calendar Day view. Color-coded pills provide insights into your day:

  • Green: Timeline activity matches a logged time entry.
  • Red: Timeline activity with no corresponding time entry.
  • Orange: Time entry exists without timeline activity, indicating potential discrepancies.

By clicking on any pill, you’ll see detailed information about each activity, including total duration, active time, and an expandable list of apps used. Now you can convert any activity pill directly into a time entry.


Toggl Track’s Calendar Day View with timeline pills

🪟 Windows app Autotracker: Create Autotracking rules

You can now drag your cursor over any open window, and — voila! — you’ve created an auto-tracking rule. You’ll be prompted to set details like description, project, and tags.

A time entry will automatically start when you open that window, and you can choose how much time should be spent there before tracking begins.

Autotracking rules

SUGGESTED NEXT STEPS

:computer: Download the Windows app here.

:open_book: Check out the knowledge base article to see all our Windows app features.


Let’s agree: time tracking isn’t the goal; it’s a tool. The goal is to reduce friction and give you back control over how you spend your day and what you focus on.

We’re continually improving automated time tracking — stay tuned for more updates.

1 Like

Hi is there way to get the description filled from the window title?

I use the same program for multiple projects so it would be great for each time block to have the current project name in the title.

As I see it currently I just get the program name which doesn’t help me sort each time block to each client.

Thanks

Hi @Jesse_Skeens are you referring to the autotracker feature in the desktop app? If so, are you on Windows or macOS?

Hi @Veljko yes the desktop app on Windows.

@Jesse_Skeens, sorry for the delay in getting back to you!

The autotracker feature should record the active app and the window title. If the title remains the same, the description will remain the same, but you can always allocate keywords to specific titles:

If you are referring to the Timeline feature that records all your activity automatically, it should contain app name and window title as well, depending on if the title changes when you change what you are working on.

Feel free to DM me with examples you see so I can look into this further fo you.

Hi @Veljko

Thanks a lot for this reply. Looking back at my log I just see the title of the program and no window title with the project name. I’ll give it another shot and report back.

What is the main difference between the autotracker and the Timeline recording it automatically?

Cheers,

Jesse

@Jesse_Skeens The main difference between the two is that, with the Autotracker, you need to set up trigger keywords to trigger the tracking; with the Timeline feature, all you need to do is enable it, and it will record any and all activity you do for more than 10s.

Considering that Timeline records everything, we intentionally didn’t make it fully automated due to privacy concerns. You need to go through your recorded data and choose which events you want to convert to time entries—this is helpful in case you are tracking time with a team and don’t want to share any sensitive data in the form of time entries with admin users that have access to all data in reports.

By default, your timeline data is saved locally only on your device, with only the most recent 14 days of data being retained, but you can choose to sync it with our servers so you can view it in the web app as well - the data is encrypted in this case if you choose to do so.