The Best Presentation Timer: Your Options, Compared
The short answer: the best presentation timer depends on how you present, but for a live talk the strongest option is a desktop overlay like SlideTimerApp — it floats on top of your full-screen slideshow, you control it live (pause, reset, move), and it works the same in PowerPoint, Google Slides and Canva. A web timer is best for a quick countdown on a single screen; an embedded GIF suits a fixed countdown baked into one slide; a phone timer is a last resort.
On this page
What makes a good presentation timer
Before comparing tools, it helps to know what actually matters when the clock is running in front of an audience:
- Visible without breaking flow — you can glance at it without turning away from the room.
- Stays on top of your slides — it doesn't disappear the moment you go full screen.
- Live control — start, pause and reset on the fly when a discussion runs long.
- A clear finish — a red warning and an alarm so you know when to wrap up.
- Audience-optional — you can keep it to yourself or show it to the room for timed activities.
- Free and low-friction — no account, no heavy install, works offline.
The five options, compared
1. Desktop overlay timer
A small always-on-top window that floats over whatever you're presenting. It's the only option that combines live control with staying visible over a full-screen Slide Show, and one timer works across every app. This is the category SlideTimerApp is in. See overlay vs GIF vs add-in for the PowerPoint-specific detail.
2. Online (browser) timer
A countdown that runs in a browser tab — quick, free and great on a single screen. The catch: a tab can't sit on top of a full-screen slideshow, so it's best for activities where the timer is the screen. Try our online timer with sound.
3. Embedded GIF or video
A countdown clip dropped onto a slide. It plays in Slide Show, but it's locked to one slide and one fixed length, and you can't pause or move it. Best when you want a fixed countdown baked into a file you share.
4. PowerPoint add-in
A timer added inside PowerPoint. Useful for some workflows, but add-ins are often blocked on managed school and work computers and may only behave in edit mode. More in do you need an add-in?
5. Phone or smartwatch timer
Always available, but only you can see it, it's easy to forget, and looking down breaks eye contact. Fine as a backup, not as your main presentation timer.
Comparison table
| Need | Desktop overlay | Web timer | Embedded GIF | Add-in | Phone |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| On top of full-screen slideshow | Yes | No | Yes | Varies | No |
| Pause / reset live | Yes | Yes | No | Varies | Yes |
| Audience can see it | Optional | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
| Works across PowerPoint, Slides & Canva | Yes | Tab | Per file | No | N/A |
| Alarm at zero | Yes | Yes | No | Varies | Yes |
| Free, no install permission needed | Yes | Yes | Yes | Often blocked | Yes |
Best timer for each situation
| If you're… | Best choice |
|---|---|
| Giving a live talk with slides | Desktop overlay (SlideTimerApp) |
| Running a timed classroom activity on one screen | Online timer with sound |
| Teaching over lesson slides | Desktop overlay on top of the slides |
| Sharing a deck others will present from | Embedded countdown GIF on the slide |
| Caught without your laptop | Phone timer (backup) |
Our pick
We build a desktop overlay, so treat this as a biased-but-honest view: for the widest range of real presenting and teaching, a free overlay timer is the most flexible single tool, because it's the only one that stays on top of any full-screen slideshow and lets you control it live. For quick, screen-is-the-timer moments, a web timer is simpler. Most people are well served by having both — and both can be free.
Try the free overlay timer
SlideTimerApp floats a transparent countdown over PowerPoint, Google Slides or Canva, with a red warning and an alarm at zero.
Download SlideTimerApp free ~3 MB · Windows · works offlineRelated guides
Presentation timer
How to keep any talk on time.
Overlay vs GIF vs add-in
The PowerPoint methods compared.
Classroom timer
The best timer for teachers.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best free presentation timer?
For presenting live, the best free presentation timer is a desktop overlay such as SlideTimerApp, because it floats on top of your full-screen slideshow, you can pause, reset and move it, and it works the same in PowerPoint, Google Slides and Canva. A web timer is the best choice when you only need a quick countdown in a browser tab.
What is the best timer for teachers and classrooms?
Teachers usually want a big, visible countdown with an alarm that the whole class can see. A fullscreen online timer with sound works well on a single screen; a desktop overlay is better when you also want the timer on top of lesson slides. Both should be free and need no student data.
Is a phone or smartwatch timer good for presentations?
A phone or smartwatch timer works in a pinch, but only you can see it, it's easy to lose track of, and glancing at it breaks eye contact with the audience. A timer that appears on your presenting screen is more reliable and looks more professional.
Do I need a paid timer app?
No. Free options cover almost every need: a browser timer for quick countdowns, and a free desktop overlay like SlideTimerApp for a countdown that floats over your slides. Paid apps rarely add anything essential for everyday presenting or teaching.