SlideTimerApp

How to Add a Timer to a Canva Presentation

By the SlideTimerApp team — presentation-tool makers & daily presenters. About us.
Last updated: June 2026

Quick answer: To show a live countdown while presenting in Canva, run an overlay timer like SlideTimerApp on top of Present mode — Canva's own timer options are limited to per-slide autoplay durations and a timer element you drop into a slide, not a presenter-controlled countdown. SlideTimerApp is a separate always-on-top window: type your minutes and seconds, click Present full screen in Canva, and the timer floats over your design where you can pause, reset and move it live. The same overlay also works in PowerPoint and Google Slides.

Does Canva have a built-in timer?

Sort of — but probably not the kind you are picturing. Canva does ship two timer-ish features, and it is worth being precise about what each one does:

  • A countdown timer element (graphic/sticker). Open the Elements panel and search "timer" or "countdown" and you'll find animated timer graphics you can place on a slide. These are decorative animations — a visual countdown baked into the design — not a clock you steer with a remote or keyboard.
  • Per-slide autoplay durations. In Present and record and Canva's autoplay/timed options, you can set how many seconds each slide stays on screen before it advances. That paces the deck automatically, but it is slide timing, not a visible countdown for the speaker.

What Canva does not have is a flexible, always-visible presenter countdown that you control live — one you can start, pause, reset and reposition mid-sentence while you talk. The autoplay durations advance slides on a fixed schedule, and the timer element just plays its animation. Neither lets you say "give the group five more minutes" and reset on the spot. That gap is exactly what an overlay timer fills.

There's one more limitation worth knowing: a timer element lives on a single slide, so once you advance, it's gone — it won't follow you across the deck the way a presenter clock should. And because both built-in options are tied to the Canva file itself, you'd have to rebuild them in every new presentation and again when you move to PowerPoint or Google Slides. A countdown that you actually use to pace a live talk needs to be independent of any one slide or file.

Tip: If all you need is a fixed visual on one slide (for example, a 60-second activity graphic), the built-in timer element is fine. If you need to manage your own talk time across the whole deck, use the overlay below.

The overlay method: a timer on top of Canva Present

An overlay timer is a small desktop window that floats above whatever is on screen — including Canva's full-screen Present mode. Because Canva runs in a browser, a separate always-on-top window sits cleanly over the present view and keeps counting no matter which slide you are on.

Unlike embedding a GIF or video into a slide or installing an add-in, SlideTimerApp is a separate overlay window — so it survives full-screen Slide Show, can be moved, resized and reset live, and is reused across every deck and every app. It is transparent and frameless, so only the digits show; you drag it to a corner, drag a corner to resize, and the numbers turn red as time runs low and flash with an alarm sound at zero. Nothing is baked into the Canva file, so the same timer carries over to your next PowerPoint or Google Slides deck without any rework.

This matters most in the moments where Canva's built-ins fall short. Picture a 45-minute workshop run from Canva: you want a 10-minute block for an exercise, then a quick 2-minute recap, then back to slides. With the overlay you tap the 10-minute preset, hit Space, and when the group needs a little longer you press R and reset — all without touching your deck or breaking out of Present mode. The red warning gives you a heads-up before you run out, and the alarm makes the hard stop obvious to the whole room. Because the window remembers its size and position, it's right where you left it the next time you present.

A few practical notes for Canva specifically. Canva runs in your browser, so keep the overlay pinned (always-on-top) — that's what lets it stay visible above a full-screen browser tab. Place it in a corner that your slide designs leave clear; a top corner usually works because most Canva templates put their key content centred or lower. And if you switch between Present full screen and Present and record, the overlay simply stays put on screen, so you don't have to set anything up twice.

How to add a countdown timer to Canva

  1. Download & open SlideTimerApp. Run the free portable app on your Windows PC — no installation, no account.
  2. Set the time and pin on top. Type minutes and seconds, or tap a 1, 5, 10 or 15-minute preset, then click the pin so the timer stays above the browser.
  3. Open your Canva presentation. In Canva, click Present and choose Present full screen. Drag the overlay to a corner and resize it so it doesn't cover your design.
  4. Start the countdown. Press Space to start or pause and R to reset. The digits turn red as time runs low, then flash with an alarm at zero.
Screen-sharing on Zoom, Meet or Teams? Share your whole screen (not just the Canva browser tab) so the overlay window is included in what your audience sees.
Download SlideTimerApp free ~3 MB · Windows · works offline

Canva's built-in timer options vs an overlay timer

Canva's built-in timer optionsOverlay timer (SlideTimerApp)
Presenter-controlled live countdownNoYes
Pause / reset during the talkNoYes
Alarm sound at zeroNoYes
Reuse the same timer in PowerPoint & Google SlidesNoYes
Works while screen-sharingTab onlyYes

The takeaway: Canva's options are great for design (a graphic on a slide) and for auto-advancing a deck, but an overlay is what you want when you are the one keeping time in the room.

When to use Canva's own timer element instead

The overlay isn't always the answer. Reach for Canva's built-in features when:

  • The timer is part of the design. A countdown graphic on a "starts in 5 minutes" holding slide or a quiz round looks intentional baked into the layout — and it travels with the file if you export to video or share a link.
  • You're exporting to video or a self-running link. The overlay is a live desktop window, so it won't appear in an exported MP4 or a shared Canva presentation link. For those, place a timer element or use autoplay durations so the timing lives inside the file.
  • You're not on Windows at the podium. SlideTimerApp is a Windows app. If you'll present from a tablet or Mac without screen-sharing from a PC, the in-Canva element is your fallback.

For everything else — live talks, lessons, workshops and meetings where you manage your own time — the overlay is the flexible choice, and it's free.

Google Slides timer

The same overlay method, no extension needed.

Add a timer to PowerPoint

Float a countdown over Slide Show.

Presentation & speech timer

Keep any talk on schedule.

Frequently asked questions

Does Canva have a countdown timer?

Partly. Canva offers a countdown timer element you can drop on a slide and per-slide autoplay durations in its Present and record / autoplay mode, but it has no flexible always-visible presenter countdown that you pause, reset and control live. For that, run an overlay timer like SlideTimerApp on top of Present mode.

How do I add a timer to Canva slides?

To put a timer graphic inside a slide, open the Elements panel, search "timer" and place a timer element or sticker. To show a live countdown while you speak, open SlideTimerApp, set your time, pin it on top, then click Present full screen in Canva so the timer floats over your design.

Can I show a timer while presenting in Canva?

Yes. Canva has no built-in presenter-controlled countdown, so use an overlay. SlideTimerApp is a separate always-on-top window that floats over Canva Present full screen, and you can pause, reset and move it live with the keyboard.

Is there a free timer for Canva presentations?

Yes. SlideTimerApp is a free, portable Windows app (about 3 MB, no install, works offline) that overlays a countdown on top of any Canva presentation, and the same timer also works in PowerPoint and Google Slides.