Chess Timer
Two-player clock with increment. Tap your side when your move is done. Also great as a meeting timer.
About the Chess Timer
A chess clock gives each player their own time bank. When you finish your move, you tap your side of the clock — stopping your timer and starting your opponent's. This ensures both players use equal total time in a game.
Using as a meeting timer
The same two-player clock works perfectly for meetings, debates, or presentations where you want to ensure balanced speaking time. Use the Meeting presets (5 min or 10 min per person) and tap when you finish speaking.
Time controls
- Bullet — 1 minute per player. Ultra-fast games.
- 3+2 — 3 minutes with 2 second increment. Popular online format.
- Blitz — 5 minutes. Classic fast chess.
- Rapid — 10–15 minutes. Standard tournament rapid.
Chess time controls explained
Chess clocks enforce time limits so games end in finite time. Classical chess (used in World Championships) gives each player 90-120 minutes for the first 40 moves plus 30 minutes for the rest. Rapid chess uses 15-25 minutes per player. Blitz is 3-5 minutes. Bullet chess is under 3 minutes. Increment adds a fixed number of seconds after each move (e.g. "5+3" means 5 minutes plus 3 seconds per move).
- Classical — 90+ minutes per player, used in official FIDE tournaments
- Rapid — 15-25 minutes, increasingly popular for club and online play
- Blitz — 3-5 minutes per player, fast-paced and exciting to watch
- Bullet — 1-2 minutes, tests speed and intuition over calculation
- Increment — bonus seconds added after each move, prevents flagging on a winning position