Theclockyourpokernighthasbeenmissing.
A fast, flashy tournament clock that runs your blinds, your bounties, and your payouts — controlled from any phone in the room.
No charts.
No clutter.
Just the numbers everyone at the table needs.
Built for nights like yours.
Set it up once. Press play. Never look back.
Build a tournament that runs itself — from buy-in to last chip.
Dial the steepness. Watch the ladder redraw itself.
Adjust the curve with one slider and every payout recalculates live. Keep the bubble exciting or let first place feel like a win.
Rule of three. We'll enforce it.
Pick three colors. Three values. The blind structure auto-validates so nobody ever has to make change.
Close the door exactly when you want to.
Pick a level. When the timer hits it, registration closes and the prize pool locks. A running countdown warns stragglers.
A display built to be read from across the room.
Eight themes, a wheel that tickles, and a deal your friends will remember.
Match your felt.
Eight curated looks. Tap to preview.
Spin it. Everyone leans in.
Configure the pool, load the prizes, let chaos do the rest. The wheel tickles the pointer on every pip and pauses half a second before the reveal.
Control the tournament from anywhere in the room.
Display the clock on the big screen. Run it from the phone in your pocket.
Bust a player from the bathroom.
We won't ask.
Every action syncs in real-time. Bust, rebuy, add player, pause — the TV reacts the moment you tap the phone. No refresh. No lag.
B, R, A, Space.
That's the whole interface. Run the clock without taking your eyes off the table.
Six characters. Or a camera.
Everyone helping with the tournament scans the QR and lands on the controller page. No signup. No install.
Close the tab. Reboot. We kept it warm.
Every blind, every bust, every bounty spin is written locally. Come back eighteen hours later and press resume.
Write your house rules in ink.
Field-tested guides for anyone running a recurring poker night.
Shuffle up
and deal.
Free forever. No account, no downloads, no friction between you and your friends arguing over side pots.
Questions, answered
Is Poker Timer free? +
Yes. The full tournament clock, blind structure editor, chip set designer, mystery bounty wheel, payout curve editor, and all eight themes are free to use in any browser with no account required. A Pro subscription ($4.99/month or $39.99/year) adds multi-device remote control for running the timer on a TV while your phone drives it.
Can I use it for a home poker tournament? +
Yes — it's built specifically for home games. Set player count, starting stack, buy-in, and rebuys during setup, design a chip set that respects the three-colour rule, and drag-and-drop your blind structure. The clock handles level advancement, breaks, payouts, late registration, and knockouts automatically.
Does it support mystery bounties and progressive bounties? +
Mystery bounties are supported with an animated prize wheel, configurable prize pool, prize duplication, and optional bounty on rebuy. Progressive bounties are not yet supported but are on the roadmap.
Can I run the timer on a TV and control it from my phone? +
Yes, with a Pro subscription. Start a session on your TV or laptop, share the six-character room code (or QR code), and open the controller URL on any phone. Up to 10 controllers per session sync in real time via websockets.
Do rebuys and add-ons work? +
Yes. Press R to register a rebuy, A for an add-on, and B for a bust. Rebuy and add-on fees feed automatically into the prize pool and payout ladder. A late-registration window with a live countdown is built in.
Do I need an account? +
No account is required for the free tier. The app runs entirely in your browser and saves your setup locally. An account (sign-in via Google or GitHub) is only required for the Pro multi-device remote-control feature, because a session needs to pair a host screen with its controllers.
Does it work offline? +
Once the page has loaded, the free tier runs entirely client-side and will continue to work if your connection drops. Pro multi-device sync requires a live internet connection because controllers talk to the host through our websocket relay.