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    52/17 Productivity Method

    Productivity strategy involving 52 minutes of focused work followed by 17 minutes of rest, based on data from DeskTime's analysis of productive employees and grounded in ultradian rhythm research.

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    About this tool

    Overview

    The 52/17 rule is a productivity strategy that involves 52 minutes of focused work followed by 17 minutes of rest or relaxation, discovered through analysis of the most productive employees at DeskTime.

    How It Works

    Work intensely for 52 minutes without interruptions or distractions, then take a complete 17-minute break away from your work. The 17-minute break provides enough time for your brain to genuinely reset—processing information, filing away what you've learned, and preparing for the next round.

    Scientific Basis

    The method is grounded in research on ultradian brain rhythms—natural 90-120-minute cycles of alertness and rest discovered by sleep researcher Nathaniel Kleiterman in the 1950s. The 52/17 structure aligns with these natural energy fluctuations.

    Benefits

    • Maintains high focus during work periods
    • Prevents burnout through structured breaks
    • Aligns with natural biological rhythms
    • More sustainable than continuous work
    • Improves overall productivity and work quality

    Implementation Tips

    • Use a timer to track work and break periods
    • During work time, eliminate all distractions
    • Use breaks for activities unrelated to work (walk, stretch, socialize)
    • Avoid checking work emails during break time
    • Be consistent with the schedule for best results
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    Information

    Websiteluxafor.com
    PublishedMar 17, 2026

    Categories

    1 Item
    Time Management Practice

    Tags

    3 Items
    #breaks
    #biological-rhythms
    #productivity

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    52/17 Rule

    A productivity methodology suggesting working in focused 52-minute blocks followed by 17-minute breaks, based on DeskTime's 2014 study of top performers' work patterns.

    52-17 Rule

    Work-break productivity ratio discovered by DeskTime in 2014 research. Most productive employees work for 52 minutes, then break for 17 minutes. The ratio has evolved to 75/33 in recent studies.

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