Now you can keep a ledger of your time. Designed for simplicity: just tap buttons to record your day without typing. Analyze patterns to discover where your time leaks.
Hi Product Hunt! 👋
I’m a solo maker from South Korea.
I’ve always been obsessed with productivity, wanting to cut down on wasted hours and focus on what matters. But I realized I didn't actually know where my time was going. It felt like time was just leaking away without me noticing.
That’s why I built Time Ledger. The idea is simple: Manage your time exactly like you manage your money.
Personally, I hate "organizing for the sake of organizing." Complex tools often become another chore. So, I focused entirely on simplicity:
- No typing: Just tap buttons to record your day.
- Visual insights: Check your productivity patterns at a glance.
- Minimalist: A simple design to help you focus.
I hope you find this tool useful. As a solo maker, I genuinely appreciate any feedback or suggestions. Please let me know what you think, and I'll keep improving the app based on your thoughts.
Thanks!
@boukar_sall The paperwork is sorted and the app is now officially available in France. Thanks for waiting!
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@hbnhb congrats on the launch! I hate wasting my time, but time well spent is subjective for each one of us so it's nice to be able to track where my time goes whether it's work or play. UX is straight forward too. Excited to try when the android version is good to go!
@busmark_w_nika That’s a great idea! Converting time into monetary value would definitely make it resonate more with users. I'll think about how to incorporate this feature. Thanks for the feedback!
@kamil_maksymowicz I agree. I'll think about how to make a widget that people would actually want on their home or lock screen. Thanks for the feedback!
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Congrats on the launch! The ledger concept is very intuitive. Do you have plans to allow exporting this data into CSV or integrating it with tools like Notion?
@valeriia_kuna Thank you for your interest. I think that exporting accumulated data is essential. I plan to implement CSV export in a future update.
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Love the money metaphor. I've tried so many time tracking apps but they all feel like work. The tap-only approach is key - the moment you have to type something, the habit breaks. Congrats on the launch from South Korea!
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Congrats on launch! Love the money metaphor and the ultra-simple UX.
@zeiki_yu Thanks! I believe that for an app to become a habit, it should be ultra-simple. That was my intention, so I’m really glad you noticed it!
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Would love to try it, but unfortunately “This app is currently not available in your country or region.”-notification when I click on the link 😭 (EU, BXL)
@nicogs I’m so sorry about that. Since this is my first app launch, I just realized I missed some steps for EU distribution. I’m sorting out the paperwork right now to get it unlocked asap.
I’ll make sure to update you here again as soon as it’s live in your region. Thanks for the interest!
@nicogs The paperwork is sorted and the app is now officially available in Belgium. Thanks for your patience!
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The "no typing" approach is exactly right. Every time tracker I've tried requires too much friction to actually use consistently. Curious how granular you recommend going - do you find people get more value from tracking by the hour or by activity type? Either way, the money metaphor makes time waste viscerally real in a way that abstract "productivity" never does.
@philip_sorensen Thank you for the support and the congratulations!
Based on my own experience building and using it: Detailed tracking works better, but consistency is crucial. It helps you discover specific patterns that show you how to be more productive. However, if detailed tracking feels like a burden, tracking by broad activity chunks is still very effective.
Ultimately, the right answer is whatever method you can stick to. I designed the UX specifically to embrace both styles flexibly!
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Mad respect for shipping this — especially as a solo builder. It’s refreshing to see something that feels thoughtful and well-executed.
What was the hardest part of getting this out the door? Rooting for you on launch day
The hardest part was actually taming the AI coding tools. While they boosted speed, they'd often veer off track on fine UX details. I solved this by changing my workflow: instead of dumping all the context at once, I built it up step-by-step, layering details to get the polish I wanted.
Replies
Time Ledger
@hbnhb unavailable in france :(
Time Ledger
@boukar_sall The paperwork is sorted and the app is now officially available in France. Thanks for waiting!
@hbnhb congrats on the launch! I hate wasting my time, but time well spent is subjective for each one of us so it's nice to be able to track where my time goes whether it's work or play. UX is straight forward too. Excited to try when the android version is good to go!
Time Ledger
Time Ledger
Time Ledger
For Android users :
The app is currently under review by the Google Play Store. I will post an update here as soon as it goes live.
Really appreciate your interest!
minimalist phone: creating folders
It would be cool to show time = money expense.
Time Ledger
@busmark_w_nika That’s a great idea! Converting time into monetary value would definitely make it resonate more with users. I'll think about how to incorporate this feature. Thanks for the feedback!
minimalist phone: creating folders
@hbnhb You are welcome :) I think it is more motivation to not waste time :D
Time Ledger
@kamil_maksymowicz I agree. I'll think about how to make a widget that people would actually want on their home or lock screen. Thanks for the feedback!
Congrats on the launch! The ledger concept is very intuitive. Do you have plans to allow exporting this data into CSV or integrating it with tools like Notion?
Time Ledger
Love the money metaphor. I've tried so many time tracking apps but they all feel like work. The tap-only approach is key - the moment you have to type something, the habit breaks. Congrats on the launch from South Korea!
Congrats on launch! Love the money metaphor and the ultra-simple UX.
Time Ledger
@zeiki_yu Thanks! I believe that for an app to become a habit, it should be ultra-simple. That was my intention, so I’m really glad you noticed it!
Would love to try it, but unfortunately “This app is currently not available in your country or region.”-notification when I click on the link 😭 (EU, BXL)
Time Ledger
@nicogs I’m so sorry about that. Since this is my first app launch, I just realized I missed some steps for EU distribution. I’m sorting out the paperwork right now to get it unlocked asap.
I’ll make sure to update you here again as soon as it’s live in your region. Thanks for the interest!
Time Ledger
@nicogs The paperwork is sorted and the app is now officially available in Belgium. Thanks for your patience!
The "no typing" approach is exactly right. Every time tracker I've tried requires too much friction to actually use consistently. Curious how granular you recommend going - do you find people get more value from tracking by the hour or by activity type? Either way, the money metaphor makes time waste viscerally real in a way that abstract "productivity" never does.
Time Ledger
@philip_sorensen Thank you for the support and the congratulations!
Based on my own experience building and using it: Detailed tracking works better, but consistency is crucial. It helps you discover specific patterns that show you how to be more productive. However, if detailed tracking feels like a burden, tracking by broad activity chunks is still very effective.
Ultimately, the right answer is whatever method you can stick to. I designed the UX specifically to embrace both styles flexibly!
Mad respect for shipping this — especially as a solo builder. It’s refreshing to see something that feels thoughtful and well-executed.
What was the hardest part of getting this out the door? Rooting for you on launch day
Time Ledger
@varun_sham Thank you! That really means a lot.
The hardest part was actually taming the AI coding tools. While they boosted speed, they'd often veer off track on fine UX details. I solved this by changing my workflow: instead of dumping all the context at once, I built it up step-by-step, layering details to get the polish I wanted.