What Is a 3 Minute Timer?
A 3 minute timer is a countdown clock that starts at 3:00 and counts down to zero, then fires a loud alarm the moment time runs out. Our version is fully browser-based — no download, no sign-up, and it works on any device from a phone to a desktop the instant you open the page.
Three minutes is one of the most specific and useful time intervals in daily life. It's the exact time needed to brew a perfect cup of tea or instant noodles, the standard rest period between heavy lifting sets in strength training, the duration of most pop songs, the length of a typical job interview pitch, and the window a chess player might have for a rapid-fire move. It's short enough to feel urgent, but long enough to actually do something with intention.
Unlike a basic phone alarm, our 3 minute timer gives you a live shrinking ring that drains clockwise as time passes, three segment pips showing each 1-minute block, colour shifts from cyan to orange at 60 seconds and red at 30 seconds, and a loud 6-beep layered alarm designed to cut through kitchen noise, music, or gym headphones — not disappear into them.
How to Use the 3 Minute Timer
It takes less than 2 seconds to get counting. Here's exactly how it works:
Benefits of a 3 Minute Timer
Three minutes sounds short — but having a proper visible countdown instead of guessing transforms how you use it:
Popular Uses for a 3 Minute Timer
You'd be surprised how many daily situations call for exactly 3 minutes. Here are the most common reasons people set a 3-minute countdown:
Frequently Asked Questions
Sports science research consistently shows that 2–3 minutes of rest between heavy compound lifts (squats, deadlifts, bench press, overhead press) allows sufficient phosphocreatine resynthesis — the energy system used for short, maximal efforts. Less rest leads to reduced performance in subsequent sets. A 3-minute timer running between sets removes the temptation to rest too long or cut rest short, keeping your training precise and progressive.
Yes. The timer uses timestamp-based delta tracking via requestAnimationFrame — it measures the real difference in clock timestamps between frames rather than counting frames themselves. Browsers throttle animation frames in background tabs, but since we're subtracting timestamps, the countdown stays accurate. The alarm fires when the tab is next active. Keep your tab open and volume on for the best experience.
3 minutes is the standard for most black teas (English Breakfast, Earl Grey, Assam) and is a safe starting point for green teas if you're using water under 80°C. Herbal and chamomile teas typically want 5 minutes. Oolong sits between 3–5 minutes depending on the oxidation level. White tea prefers 2–3 minutes. The 3-minute timer is the most universally used tea timer for everyday black tea drinkers.
Each bar represents one minute of the 3-minute countdown (3 bars × 1 minute = 3 minutes total). As each minute elapses, a bar switches off. This gives you an at-a-glance progress indicator — particularly useful when you're cooking or exercising and can't watch the digits closely. You can see from across the room whether you're on minute 3, 2, or 1 without reading the timer.
Yes. Use +1 Min or −1 Min to adjust in 1-minute increments, or type any duration from 1 to 99 minutes into the Set field and press Set. The timer title and segment pips update automatically to match. We also have dedicated pages for 1 minute, 5 minutes, 15 minutes, and 30 minutes.
The timer uses three colour states as visual urgency signals. It stays cyan throughout the normal countdown. At 60 seconds remaining it switches to orange — a gentle heads-up that the final minute has started. At 30 seconds it turns red and the ring begins glowing and pulsing, signalling the final stretch. When time hits zero everything flashes green and the alarm fires.
100% free — no account, no email, no subscription, no hidden limits. CatchyTools is supported by non-intrusive display advertising so every tool, including this timer, is completely free to use for everyone. You get the full experience: loud 6-beep alarm, visual progress ring, adjustable duration, and keyboard shortcuts without paying anything or sharing any personal information.
A single short beep is very easy to miss — especially in a kitchen with extractor fans running, in a gym with music, or when you're focused on something else. Six beeps in quick succession (each 0.35 seconds, with 0.15-second gaps) gives the alarm a total duration of approximately 3 seconds. That's long enough for your brain to register, recognise, and respond to the sound even if the first beep or two doesn't consciously register.
Yes — open it in Safari on iOS or Chrome on Android and it works immediately, no app required. The layout uses responsive CSS with clamp() values to scale perfectly from a 320px phone screen to a large desktop. The Web Audio alarm is supported in Safari on iOS 14.5+ and Chrome on Android. Make sure your phone is not on silent — the alarm uses your device's audio output which is activated automatically the moment you press Start.
Yes. Press ⏸ Pause at any moment and the timer freezes — the ring, dot, digits, and pips all hold their exact position. Press ▶ Resume (or Spacebar) to pick up from precisely where you stopped with no time lost. You can pause and resume as many times as needed within a single session, which is particularly useful if your tea got interrupted or a set took longer than expected.
We have dedicated timers for the most popular time blocks — all free, no sign-up, works on any device.