Clockify is a free time tracker with no limits on users, projects, or time entries, offering reporting, team management, and optional paid add-ons.
Each app below addresses a specific gap in Clockify's offering. We picked them based on real user review patterns and feature differentiation.
Toggl Track offers a cleaner, simpler interface than Clockify with one-click timers, detailed project reports, and browser extensions. The free plan supports up to 5 users. Its mobile apps are generally considered more polished than Clockify's.
Explore Toggl Track data →Harvest extends time tracking with native invoicing, expense tracking, and project budget monitoring. It generates invoices from tracked time and accepts payments via Stripe or PayPal. Strong for client-billing workflows.
Explore Harvest data →RescueTime runs silently in the background and categorizes time spent in apps and websites. Unlike Clockify's manual timer model, RescueTime requires zero user interaction after setup.
Explore RescueTime data →Timely captures all computer activity and meeting data, then uses AI to draft time entries for review. Users verify suggestions rather than starting timers. More comprehensive than Clockify's manual model.
Explore Timely data →Everhour integrates directly into Asana, Trello, Jira, and Basecamp interfaces. Timers appear on individual tasks, eliminating the need to context-switch to a separate tracking app.
Explore Everhour data →Hubstaff provides time tracking plus optional employee monitoring features including screenshots, activity levels, GPS for field teams, and app/URL tracking. Popular for remote teams and agencies managing distributed workers.
Explore Hubstaff data →Clockify is made by CAKE.com (same team as Pumble and Plaky) and markets itself as the only completely free time tracking solution without per-user limits.
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