TimeBloc
Block your day. Own your time.
12 followers
Block your day. Own your time.
12 followers
TimeBloc is a time-blocking planner that helps you visually schedule your day in blocks—hour by hour or minute by minute. Create routines once and watch them auto-populate your timeline, sync your existing calendar events seamlessly, use drag-and-drop to adjust tasks easily, and track your progress with simple analytics. Your time matters—take it back.

TimeBloc is exactly what I’ve been looking for — the ability to visually block each part of my day, set up routines once and let them repeat, and actually see how my time is spent. Seeing events laid out as colored blocks makes me more conscious of where hours go. Excited to start using it!
What impresses me about TimeBloc is its combination of timeline view, drag-and-drop event rescheduling, routine support, calendar integration, and progress statistics. If the charts show how well I stuck to my blocks over weeks or months, this becomes a powerful productivity companion.
I often finish a day and ask, “What did I even do?” With TimeBloc, the idea of planning my day by the hour, color-coding tasks, tagging leisure vs work, and then getting notified gives me a structure I’ve missed. If it’s intuitive, this might become my go-to scheduling tool.
From a UI perspective, TimeBloc must keep transitions smooth (drag & drop blocks, drag routines into the schedule), and ensure clarity when many blocks fill a day. The timeline metaphor is strong — if it stays intuitive and doesn’t feel cluttered, users will lean in rather than get overwhelmed.
Congrats to the TimeBloc team on this launch! Time-blocking helps us reclaim not just minutes, but intention. This app could help people bring order to busy days, make room for what matters, and feel more in control. I hope many discover its flow and consistency benefits.
Block your day → follow your plan → review your stats. TimeBloc gives you what matters without overcomplicating. If sync, reliability and UX are rock solid, this is a tool I’d use daily.