One click in the menu bar opens the timer. Pick a preset or set your own and drop into the work.
Every completed session is logged automatically and becomes a filled square in your activity grid.
Days compound into weeks. The chain gets longer, and breaking it gets harder. That's the point.
Get one percent better every day for a year, and you end up thirty-seven times better. Deepflow is built around that one idea — small reps, made visible.
Open it from the menu bar, switch between timer and stopwatch, and start a session without ever leaving what you're doing. No windows to manage. No app to find.
Built-in Pomodoro, your own presets, or grab the big readout and drag to dial in exactly the block you want. It remembers what works for you.
Keep the countdown hovering over everything — a glanceable nudge that you're on the clock.
A calm chime when the session's done, with adjustable volume and auto-mute so you're never startled out of flow.
Streaks, monthly insights, goals, and full session history — all in one view.
A focus timer designed to disappear — and a habit tracker designed to keep you honest.
Deepflow started with a simple frustration of my own: focus apps that demanded more attention than the work itself. Dashboards, streak-or-die notifications, gamified noise. I wanted the opposite — a timer that disappears the moment you start, and a quiet record of the reps you put in.
So I built it around one belief: you don't need to be more disciplined, you need to be able to see your progress. Get one percent better every day and it compounds into something you can't ignore. Every session becomes a square. Every square extends the chain.
No Dock icon. No window to manage. No account to make. Deepflow lives in your menu bar and gets out of the way — because the best tool for deep work is the one you forget is even there. The only thing it asks of you is that you show up.
Your focus data is yours. Everything stays on your Mac — no tracking, no analytics SDKs, no accounts, no servers logging when you work. I can't see your streak, and I built it that way on purpose.