The 'pomodoro' technique is ideal for productivity, but can it help with cleaning? I tried it out

A woman sat on her bed decluttering her bedroom, tidying away boxes and items as well as suitcases
(Image credit: Getty Images)

The 'pomodoro' technique might sound like a weird name for a way to stay productive, but it's simple. Pomodoro means tomato in Italian and the Italian man that came up with this time management concept in the 1980s used a tomato-shaped timer to carry it out. Hence, the not-so-unsual name, now there's a little context.

For this technique, you set a 25-minute timer to completely focus on a task and every time it goes off, you get a 5-minute break. If you end up doing four of these in a row, totalling two hours, you get a longer 15-30 minute break before you start again.

How to use the pomodoro technique for cleaning

Cluttered room

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

The 'pomodoro' technique is focused on maximum productivity. To do a task well, it hypothesises that if you carve out 25-minute blocks of focused attention with 5-minute breaks in-between, you'll do the task much better.

And I love to gamify the way I do things, so having a timer for cleaning up my house is a perfect way to make it, dare I say, a bit fun? With the promise of a little bit of time to step back and take a break, it's supposed to be much easier to apply yourself in the time you've designated just for cleaning.

yueton Mechanical Tomato Timer
yueton Mechanical Tomato Timer: $8.99 at Amazon

While not essential, the 'pomodoro' technique stems from a simple tomato-shaped mechanical timer. And if, like me, you need to stay away from your phone to avoid picking it up and distracting yourself, it might be the perfect solution.

How it went

Boxes for decluttering your home

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

I've used the 'pomodoro' technique when studying for exams, I've used it when I'm trying to get work done. So, why not try it for cleaning? It seems like a trick I've been missing out on for far too long. But, what's it like in practise?

While I do a little bit of cleaning every day to stay on top of it, there are some tasks I definitely put off because I know they need more of my attention. Like sorting out the pile of abandoned clothes gathering at the bottom of my closet or the box under my bed that I use for important documents, but has become some sort of horrible dumping ground for old mail.

It's these tasks that I decided to use the 'pomodoro' technique on, well, probably four pomodoros by the time I'm done with it. No, I didn't buy a tomato timer, although I kind of wish I had. The good old-fashioned phone timer came to the rescue, though I had to make sure it was kept far away from me so I didn't feel some sudden urge to randomly scroll in my 25-minutes of distraction-free time.

It's actually surprising how fast 25-minutes passes when you're not doing anything else but the task at hand.

It's actually surprising how fast 25-minutes passes when you're not doing anything else but the task at hand. Although it shouldn't be that surprising since I can sink 25-minutes into scrolling on my phone without achieving a thing. Now, I don't think I could use the 'pomodoro' technique every time I clean, 25-minutes isn't always necessary, but it absolutely helped when I had a specific task in mind.

Suddenly, the abandoned clothes had made their way onto my bed, I'd sorted through them. Then, I got to take a 5-minute break. Then I started trying some on, putting some in a box for donating, or hanging the ones I wanted to keep back up. Then, another break.

By having those moments where I was allowed to stop, but feeling like I'd actually earned it, was genius. It's far too easy these days to doom scroll when you're avoiding a task. And yes, I had to keep my phone away from me to make sure I didn't fall into the distraction trap, but I got a lot more done than I'd ever do. Maybe next time, I'll get a proper little tomato timer.


Google News

Follow Tom's Guide on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our up-to-date news, analysis, and reviews in your feeds.


More from Tom's Guide

Grace Dean

Grace is a freelance journalist working across homes, lifestyle, gaming and entertainment. You'll find her writing for Tom's Guide, TechRadar, Space.com, and other sites. If she's not rearranging her furniture, decluttering her home, or relaxing in front of the latest streaming series, she'll be typing fervently about any of her much-loved hobbies and interests. To aid her writing, she loves to head down internet rabbit holes for an unprecedented amount of time.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.