1. Introduction: The Tool That Shows You Where Your Time Actually Goes
I thought I knew how I spent my time. I was wrong by about three hours every day.
That realization came in my first week with RescueTime, when the dashboard showed me that what I considered a "focused" Tuesday actually included 47 minutes on news sites, 32 minutes cycling through Slack threads that had nothing to do with my projects, and an embarrassing 28-minute detour into YouTube that I genuinely did not remember taking. I had estimated my productive time at around six hours. RescueTime measured it at three hours and forty-two minutes.
I have been running RescueTime for eight months across my MacBook, Windows desktop, and Android phone, accumulating over 1,400 hours of tracked data across roughly 170 working days. I tested the free Lite plan for the first month, then Premium at $12/month for the remaining seven. I tested FocusTime blocking, goal alerts, offline time logging, the Google Calendar integration, the [Slack](/reviews/slack) status integration, and the [Zapier](/reviews/zapier) connection. I compared its data against manual time logs I kept for two parallel weeks to validate accuracy.
The core question with any productivity tracker is whether knowing how you spend your time actually changes how you spend it. After eight months, my answer is a qualified yes, but with caveats this review will cover honestly.
2. What is RescueTime? The Pioneer of Automatic Time Awareness
RescueTime launched in 2008, founded in Seattle by Joe Hruska and Tony Wright. At a time when time tracking meant manually starting and stopping timers, they built something fundamentally different: a tool that watches what you do in the background and categorizes it automatically. No timers. No manual entry. No discipline required. Just install it and let the data accumulate.
That founding vision remains RescueTime's core identity nearly two decades later. While competitors like [Toggl Track](/reviews/toggl-track) and Clockify built their businesses around manual time tracking for billing and project management, RescueTime carved out a different niche entirely. It is not a time tracker in the traditional sense. It is a time awareness tool, designed to answer the question "where did my time actually go?" rather than "how many hours should I bill this client?"
The company has remained small and independent. RescueTime is not trying to be an enterprise workforce monitoring suite or compete with Hubstaff for the employee surveillance market. Its target user is the individual knowledge worker who suspects they could be more productive but lacks data to prove it.
Today, RescueTime claims over four billion hours of tracked time. The product has evolved to include distraction blocking, goal setting, daily highlights, and integrations, but the automatic tracking engine that made it distinctive in 2008 remains the foundation.
3. RescueTime Pricing & Plans: Simple and Affordable
RescueTime keeps pricing straightforward. Two tiers, no per-seat enterprise pricing, no hidden add-ons. This is a personal productivity tool priced for individuals.
3.1 Lite (Free): Enough to See the Problem
The Lite plan is a genuine introduction to automatic time tracking, not a crippled demo. You get the core tracking engine running in the background on your computer, automatic categorization of applications and websites, a weekly email summary, and access to a basic dashboard showing where your time went.
What is Included: Automatic time tracking across desktop applications and websites. Basic categorization with productivity scores. Weekly email reports. Dashboard access with limited historical data. Tracking accuracy is identical to Premium.
Key Limitations: No FocusTime blocking. No goals or alerts. No daily highlights. No offline time tracking. Limited reports and historical data. No integrations.
Best For
Anyone curious about where their time goes. Students. Casual users wanting a weekly reality check.
Reality Check
I used Lite for the first month and it was eye-opening enough to justify the upgrade. Lite shows you the diagnosis. Premium gives you the treatment.
3.2 Premium ($12/month or $78/year): The Full System
Premium unlocks everything RescueTime offers, and the jump from Lite is significant. At $12 per month or $78 per year (a 46% discount for annual billing), it is priced competitively for a personal productivity tool.
Key Upgrades from Lite: FocusTime distraction blocking lets you block distracting websites while keeping productive sites accessible. Goals and alerts notify you when you hit targets or exceed distraction limits. Daily highlights let you tag accomplishments, adding context to raw time data. Offline time logging records meetings and calls away from your computer. Detailed reports with full historical data let you analyze trends over months and years. Integrations with Google Calendar, Slack, Zapier, and others connect your time data to the rest of your workflow. Custom categorization lets you reclassify sites and apps the default engine miscategorizes.
Best For
Knowledge workers serious about improving productivity patterns. Freelancers wanting data on work habits. Remote workers needing self-accountability.
Reality Check
At $6.50/month with annual billing, this is less than a mediocre lunch. If the data saves you even 30 minutes a week of wasted time, you recoup the investment many times over.
Pricing Comparison Table
| Feature | Lite (Free) | Premium ($12/mo or $78/yr) |
|---|---|---|
| Automatic Time Tracking | Yes | Yes |
| Basic Dashboard | Yes | Yes |
| Weekly Email Summary | Yes | Yes |
| FocusTime Blocking | No | Yes |
| Goals & Alerts | No | Yes |
| Daily Highlights | No | Yes |
| Offline Time Logging |
Pro Tip
Start with Lite for one to two weeks to see if automatic tracking resonates with you. If you find yourself checking the dashboard regularly and wanting more detail, upgrade to Premium with annual billing to lock in the $78/year rate.
4. Key Features Deep Dive
4.1 Automatic Time Tracking: The Feature That Makes Everything Else Possible
The automatic tracking engine is what separates RescueTime from every manual time tracker on the market, and it is genuinely impressive in daily use.
Once installed, RescueTime runs silently in the background, recording the foreground application, active website, and window title. No timer to start, no project to select, no category to choose. You work, and RescueTime watches.
The categorization engine assigns every activity to one of five productivity levels: Very Productive, Productive, Neutral, Distracting, and Very Distracting. Out of the box, it gets most classifications right. Code editors are productive, social media is distracting, email lands in neutral. On Premium, you can reclassify anything the defaults get wrong, which I needed to do for about 15 activities in my first week.
I validated accuracy by keeping a manual time log for two consecutive weeks in parallel. Results matched within about 8% daily, with discrepancies mostly from brief app switches that RescueTime caught and I missed. RescueTime was more accurate than my own memory.
Reality Check
Tracking only captures time on devices where RescueTime is installed. Phone calls, in-person meetings, and whiteboard sessions are invisible unless logged manually. For desk-bound knowledge workers, this covers 80-90% of the workday.
4.2 Productivity Score: Your Daily Reality Check
Every day, RescueTime calculates a productivity score from 0 to 100 based on the ratio of productive to distracting time. This single number became the metric I check first every morning.
A day in code editors and documentation earns 80s or 90s. A day fragmented by social media drops to the 40s or 50s. Email and Slack pull the score toward the middle. What makes the score useful is the trend line. Individual days vary for legitimate reasons, but weekly and monthly trends reveal genuine patterns. My first month averaged 61. By month four, after specific changes based on RescueTime data, I averaged 74. That thirteen-point improvement represented roughly an hour of reclaimed productive time per day.
Pro Tip
Do not chase a perfect 100. A realistic target for a knowledge worker is 70-80. Anything above 80 consistently usually means you are not taking enough breaks or you are miscategorizing everything as productive. The goal is awareness and gradual improvement, not gamification-driven perfection.
4.3 FocusTime: Distraction Blocking That Respects Your Intelligence
FocusTime is RescueTime's Premium distraction blocking feature, and it approaches the problem more intelligently than most website blockers I have tried.
When you activate a FocusTime session, RescueTime blocks access to sites you have categorized as Distracting or Very Distracting. Unlike blunt blocking tools, FocusTime lets you configure exactly what gets blocked and what stays accessible. I keep Stack Overflow and GitHub accessible during FocusTime because they are productive for my work.
Sessions can be triggered manually, scheduled at specific times, or triggered through integrations. I have mine set to auto-activate from 9am to 12pm on weekdays. If I try to visit Twitter during a session, I get a gentle redirect reminding me that I chose to focus, with an option to end early if needed.
Over seven months, I ran approximately 350 FocusTime sessions. My productivity score during sessions averaged 86, compared to 68 during non-FocusTime hours. That 18-point difference translates to meaningfully more deep work during my morning hours.
Reality Check
FocusTime only blocks sites in your browser, not desktop applications. If your distraction is Steam or a messaging app, you need a different tool. The blocking is also easy to override -- this is a self-accountability tool, not a prison.
4.4 Goals & Alerts: Behavioral Nudges That Work
Premium lets you set daily goals for productive time, distracting time, time in specific categories, or time on specific activities. When you hit a goal or exceed a limit, RescueTime sends a notification. Simple concept, surprisingly effective execution.
I set three goals: at least four hours on productive activities, no more than 45 minutes on distracting activities, and at least two hours on software development. The alerts surface as desktop notifications, quiet enough to not interrupt flow but visible enough to catch drifting.
The distracting time alert changed my behavior more than any other feature. On days when I hit 45 minutes by 2pm, the notification forced a conscious decision: keep browsing or redirect. Most days I redirected. Before RescueTime, distracting time accumulated invisibly. The alert made it visible at the exact moment I could still change course.
Best For
Users who respond to quantified feedback and gentle accountability. If you have ever set a vague goal like "be more productive" and then had no way to measure progress, RescueTime goals turn that vague intention into a measurable daily target.
4.5 Detailed Reports & Daily Highlights: Understanding Your Patterns
The reporting engine on Premium is where RescueTime's long-term value lives. After months of accumulated data, you start seeing patterns that are impossible to notice in real time.
Reports break down by day, week, month, or custom date range, filterable by category, application, productivity level, or time of day. The time-of-day analysis was particularly revealing: my productivity peaks between 9am and 11:30am, drops sharply after lunch, and is essentially worthless after 5pm. This data led me to restructure my day, putting deep work in the morning and meetings in the afternoon, increasing my weekly productive hours by roughly three.
Daily highlights complement the automatic data by letting you add human context. At the end of each day, RescueTime prompts you to note what you accomplished. When you review a week, you see both what you did (highlights) and how your time was distributed (automatic tracking). The combination is more useful than either alone.
Pro Tip
Review your monthly report on the first of each month. Look for three things: your average productivity score trend, your peak productive hours, and which distracting activities consumed the most time. Then make one specific change based on what you find. Trying to fix everything at once does not work. One targeted change per month compounds over time.
5. RescueTime Pros: What It Gets Genuinely Right
Zero-Friction Tracking That Actually Persists
Every manual time tracker I have used eventually gets abandoned because starting and stopping timers adds friction to every task switch. RescueTime eliminates this. Install it once, and tracking happens forever. Eight months in, I spend zero time on the tracking itself. This zero-friction approach is why RescueTime succeeds where manual tracking fails.
The Data Changes Behavior Without Willpower
Seeing objective data creates a feedback loop that abstract productivity advice cannot match. I did not force myself to stop reading news. I saw the data, felt embarrassed, and naturally redirected. The behavioral change came from awareness, not discipline. This is RescueTime's most valuable contribution: turning invisible habits into visible data.
FocusTime Strikes the Right Balance
Most distraction blockers are either too aggressive (blocking things you legitimately need) or too easy to bypass (rendering them useless). FocusTime sits in a productive middle ground. It blocks what you told it to block, stays out of the way for everything else, and can be overridden when genuinely necessary. The scheduled sessions create structure without rigidity.
Genuinely Affordable for the Value Delivered
At $78/year, RescueTime is cheaper than almost any productivity tool with comparable impact. If the data helps you reclaim even 20 minutes daily, the payback period is measured in days rather than months.
Privacy-Conscious Design for a Tracking Tool
For a tool that watches everything you do on your computer, RescueTime handles privacy thoughtfully. Data stays on your account. You can pause tracking, delete specific entries, or disable detailed window title tracking while keeping category-level data. The company does not sell user data.
6. RescueTime Cons: The Honest Limitations
No Team or Collaboration Features
RescueTime is stubbornly individual. There is no team dashboard, no manager view, no shared goals, no way to see how your team's time distributes across projects. If you want team-level productivity insights, you need DeskTime, Hubstaff, or a different tool entirely. RescueTime will not pretend to serve that use case.
Mobile Tracking Is Severely Limited
The Android app tracks app usage but not website activity in browsers. iOS is worse -- Apple's restrictions make RescueTime on iPhone essentially useless. If most of your distracting behavior happens on your phone, RescueTime misses it entirely. This is the product's single biggest blind spot.
Offline Time Logging Feels Like an Afterthought
The offline time logging on Premium lets you manually record meetings and calls. In practice, it is clunky -- remember to log it, select a category, enter duration, save. After eight months, I still forget about half the time, which means my data perpetually undercounts meetings.
The Interface Feels Dated
RescueTime's dashboard has not kept pace with modern design standards. Visualization is functional but plain, navigation occasionally confusing, and settings pages sprawling. Compared to Toggl Track or Clockify, the interface feels like it belongs to an earlier era. The data is excellent; the presentation needs a refresh.
Category Accuracy Requires Initial Investment
The automatic categorization is right about 85% of the time. Industry-specific tools and internal websites need manual reclassification. I spent about 30 minutes in week one fixing categories. Not major, but worth knowing the "automatic" part has an asterisk.
No Project-Level Tracking
RescueTime tracks by application and website, not by project. Three hours in VS Code is three hours in VS Code, with no distinction between Client A and Client B. For freelancers needing project-level billing data, RescueTime is not a replacement for Toggl Track or Clockify.
7. Setup & Implementation: Running in Under Ten Minutes
The Real Timeline
RescueTime has the fastest setup of any productivity tool I have reviewed. This is not an exaggeration.
Minutes 1-3: Installation. Download from rescuetime.com, create an account, run the installer, grant permissions. Tracking starts immediately.
Minutes 4-7: Browser Extension. Install the extension for Chrome, Firefox, or Edge. This enables site-level tracking rather than just "Google Chrome" at the application level.
Minutes 8-10: Quick Configuration. Review default categorizations, reclassify anything wrong, set your working hours.
Week 1: Let It Run. Do not change your behavior. Let RescueTime collect baseline data. The weekly summary email will be the most revealing email you receive all month.
Week 2: Set Goals (Premium). Based on baseline data, set realistic daily goals slightly better than your current numbers rather than aspirational targets.
Week 3: Activate FocusTime (Premium). Start using FocusTime during your peak productive hours, scheduled or manual.
Common Setup Mistakes
The biggest mistake is optimizing on day one. Let the tool watch you for a week before changing anything. Setting aggressive goals without baseline data leads to discouragement. The second mistake is skipping the browser extension. Without it, all web browsing shows as generic browser time with no site-level detail.
8. RescueTime vs Competitors: Head-to-Head
RescueTime vs Toggl Track: Different Problems, Different Tools
This comparison misses a fundamental difference. Toggl Track is a manual time tracker for billing. RescueTime is an automatic awareness tool for personal productivity. Both involve measurement; they measure different things.
Where Toggl Track Wins: Project-level tracking for billing. Team features. Better invoicing reports. More project management integrations. Cleaner interface.
Where RescueTime Wins: Automatic tracking without manual effort. Distraction blocking. Productivity scoring. Understanding where time actually goes.
Choose Toggl Track if: You bill clients by the hour. Choose RescueTime if: You want to understand and improve personal productivity patterns.
RescueTime vs Clockify: Free vs Automatic
Clockify offers generous free manual time tracking with project tracking, team features, and reporting. It serves a fundamentally different workflow.
Where Clockify Wins: Completely free for core features. Project and client tracking. Team dashboards. Better for billing workflows.
Where RescueTime Wins: Automatic tracking that persists long-term. Productivity scoring. FocusTime distraction blocking. Zero manual effort for data collection.
Choose Clockify if: You need free project-based time tracking. Choose RescueTime if: You want effortless personal productivity awareness.
RescueTime vs DeskTime: Personal vs Organizational
DeskTime bridges personal tracking and employee monitoring, offering automatic tracking with team management, screenshots, and employer-facing features.
Where DeskTime Wins: Team and manager dashboards. Screenshot-based verification. Project tracking built in. Better for organizational workforce monitoring.
Where RescueTime Wins: Designed for self-improvement, not surveillance. Better privacy posture. More affordable for individuals. FocusTime blocking. Less intrusive by design.
Choose DeskTime if: You manage a team and need visibility into how they spend time. Choose RescueTime if: You want personal productivity data without the surveillance overtones.
RescueTime vs Hubstaff: Worlds Apart
Hubstaff is an employee monitoring platform with GPS tracking, screenshots, and payroll integration. It shares almost no use case with RescueTime beyond both involving time data.
Where Hubstaff Wins: Complete workforce management. GPS and screenshot-based verification. Payroll and invoicing integration. Built for employers managing remote teams.
Where RescueTime Wins: Individual-focused. Privacy-respecting. No surveillance. Distraction blocking. Productivity insights rather than compliance monitoring.
Choose Hubstaff if: You manage remote employees and need accountability tools. Choose RescueTime if: You are the employee and want to manage your own productivity.
RescueTime vs Timing (Mac): The Apple Premium
Timing is a Mac-only automatic time tracker with project-level categorization using rules and AI.
Where Timing Wins: Project-level automatic tracking. Superior Mac-native interface. One-time purchase option.
Where RescueTime Wins: Cross-platform (Windows, Mac, Linux, Android). FocusTime blocking. Longer track record. More affordable ongoing.
Choose Timing if: You work exclusively on Mac and want project-level tracking. Choose RescueTime if: You work cross-platform or want distraction blocking.
| Feature | RescueTime | Toggl Track | Clockify | DeskTime | Hubstaff | Timing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Automatic Tracking | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Manual Tracking | Offline only | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Distraction Blocking | Yes | No | No |
9. Best Use Cases: Who Thrives With RescueTime
Remote Workers Needing Self-Accountability: Perfect Fit
Without a physical office providing structure, remote workers are uniquely vulnerable to distraction drift. RescueTime provides the external accountability a home office lacks, showing exactly how your day compares to what it should look like. FocusTime creates the structure that a commute and office walls used to provide. This is RescueTime's single strongest use case.
Knowledge Workers Suspecting Time Leaks
If you regularly end days feeling like you worked hard but accomplished little, RescueTime will show you where the time went. Writers, developers, analysts, marketers will get a complete picture. The gap between perceived and measured productivity is almost always larger than expected.
Freelancers Wanting Productivity Data (Not Billing)
Freelancers who track time for billing should use Toggl Track or Clockify. Freelancers who want to understand their own work patterns and identify peak productive hours will find more value in RescueTime. The two are complementary: manual tracker for billing, RescueTime for self-awareness.
Students Managing Study Habits
The free Lite plan provides enough data to see how much "study time" is actually study time. FocusTime on Premium blocks the sites that destroy academic focus during study sessions.
Anyone Building Better Work Habits
RescueTime is fundamentally a behavior change tool. If you are trying to spend more time on deep work or less time on social media, automatic tracking removes the guesswork. The goals and alerts create a feedback loop supporting gradual habit improvement.
10. Who Should NOT Use RescueTime
Teams Needing Shared Productivity Dashboards
RescueTime is individual only. No team views, aggregated reports, or manager oversight. DeskTime or Hubstaff serve that market.
Freelancers Who Need to Bill Clients by the Hour
RescueTime cannot track which project you are working on. It knows you used Figma for two hours, not whether those hours were for Client A or Client B. You need Toggl Track, Clockify, or Harvest for billing.
People Who Work Primarily on Mobile Devices
RescueTime's mobile tracking limitations make it nearly useless for phone-first workers. Android captures app-level data only, and iOS tracking is effectively non-functional.
Privacy-Sensitive Users Who Cannot Accept Background Monitoring
RescueTime reads window titles, tracks URLs, and logs every application you use. Even with privacy controls and data deletion options, some users are fundamentally uncomfortable with this level of monitoring. If background tracking creates anxiety rather than curiosity, this is not your tool.
11. Security & Compliance
For a tool that captures detailed behavioral data, security and privacy matter more than usual. RescueTime handles the basics competently.
All data transmits over HTTPS and is encrypted in transit and at rest. You can pause tracking instantly, delete specific entries or entire date ranges, and disable detailed tracking (window titles) while retaining category-level data. The company states clearly that it does not sell user data.
Security & Compliance Overview
| Certification / Feature | Status |
|---|---|
| HTTPS/TLS Encryption | Yes |
| Data Encryption at Rest | Yes |
| Two-Factor Authentication | Yes |
| GDPR Compliant | Yes |
| Data Export | Yes |
| Data Deletion on Request | Yes |
| SOC 2 Type II | Not published |
| HIPAA Compliant | No |
| SSO Integration | No |
Caution
RescueTime is cloud-only with no on-premise option. If you need SOC 2, HIPAA, or on-premise data requirements, RescueTime does not qualify. For individual use without strict compliance mandates, the security posture is reasonable.
12. Customer Support Reality Check
RescueTime's support reflects its small team size. The help center covers installation, configuration, and common questions adequately, resolving most issues without needing to contact anyone.
Email support is responsive. In my three interactions over eight months, responses arrived within 24-48 hours and addressed questions directly. The tone was personal rather than scripted. There is no live chat, no phone support, and no dedicated account management. The community is small but present on Reddit, though nowhere near as active as what you find for tools like [Todoist](/reviews/todoist) or [Notion](/reviews/notion).
What is notably absent is proactive onboarding. RescueTime drops you in after installation and lets you figure things out. For a tool whose value depends on using features beyond basic tracking, a structured walkthrough of goals, FocusTime, and daily highlights would help significantly.
13. Performance & Reliability
Over eight months across two computers, RescueTime was effectively invisible. CPU usage stays at 1-2%, memory hovers around 50-80MB, and battery impact was undetectable. Sync between the desktop app and web dashboard is consistent, with data appearing within minutes. FocusTime activates reliably on schedule. The one issue: occasional slow loading on six-month reports (8-10 seconds). Minor inconvenience for an infrequent action.
Platform & Availability
| Platform | Available |
|---|---|
| Web Dashboard | Yes |
| Desktop App (Windows) | Yes |
| Desktop App (macOS) | Yes |
| Desktop App (Linux) | Yes |
| Mobile App (Android) | Yes (limited) |
| Mobile App (iOS) | Minimal functionality |
| Browser Extension | Chrome, Firefox, Edge |
| API Access | REST API |
Support Channels
| Channel | Available |
|---|---|
| Email Support | Yes |
| Live Chat | No |
| Phone Support | No |
| Knowledge Base | Yes |
| Video Tutorials | Limited |
| Community Forum | No (Reddit only) |
| Average Response Time | 24-48 hours |
14. Final Verdict & Recommendations
Overall Rating: 4.0/5
Eight months of continuous tracking, 1,400+ hours of data, and a productivity score improvement from 61 to 74 have convinced me that RescueTime solves a problem most knowledge workers do not realize they have. The gap between perceived and actual time use is real, and RescueTime closes it with minimal effort.
The automatic tracking engine removes the friction that kills manual tracking and produces data more accurate than your own memory. FocusTime is thoughtful distraction blocking. Goals and alerts create genuine behavioral change. The reporting engine reveals patterns impossible to see in real time.
The limitations are equally real. Mobile tracking is poor. No team features. No project-level tracking. The interface needs modernization. Offline time logging is clunky. For users who need what RescueTime cannot do, these are deal-breakers.
Best For
Individual knowledge workers, remote workers, freelancers seeking self-awareness, students, and anyone who suspects they waste more time than they realize and wants data to prove it and fix it.
Not Recommended For: Teams needing shared dashboards, freelancers billing by project, mobile-first workers, or anyone uncomfortable with background behavioral monitoring.
ROI Assessment
Knowledge Worker ($78/year Premium):
- Average distracting time reduced: 45 minutes/day based on my experience
- Productive time reclaimed: approximately 30 minutes/day after accounting for break time
- Value at $60/hour knowledge worker rate: $300/month in reclaimed productive time
- Monthly cost: $6.50
- ROI: 46x
Freelancer ($78/year Premium):
- Peak productivity hours identified: restructured schedule to protect 3-hour morning focus block
- Estimated additional billable output per week: 2-3 hours
- Value at $75/hour: $600-900/month
- Monthly cost: $6.50
- ROI: 90x+
Student (Free Lite Plan):
- Study time reality check: discovered 40% of "study time" was not studying
- Behavioral adjustment: redirected approximately 5 hours/week to actual study
- Cost: $0
- ROI: Infinite
Frequently Asked Questions
Does RescueTime slow down my computer?▼
No. CPU usage stays at 1-2%, memory at 50-80MB, and battery impact is undetectable. In eight months across two machines, I never noticed any performance impact.
Can my employer see my RescueTime data?▼
No. RescueTime is a personal account tied to your email. There is no employer dashboard or admin access. This is fundamentally different from employee monitoring tools like Hubstaff or DeskTime.
Does RescueTime track what I type?▼
No. RescueTime tracks the foreground application and active website only. No keystrokes, screen content, or screenshots. Window titles are tracked by default but can be disabled in settings.
How accurate is the automatic categorization?▼
About 85% accurate out of the box. Common apps and popular websites are correct. Niche tools may need manual reclassification on Premium, which then applies retroactively.
Can I use RescueTime and Toggl Track together?▼
Yes, and many freelancers do. Toggl Track for project-level billing, RescueTime for personal productivity awareness. They serve different purposes and run simultaneously without issues.


