Elapsed0:00
Round0 / 0
Remaining0:00
Scroll for more

30/15 Interval Timer

If you have never trained on a clock before, this is the place to start. Thirty seconds of work against fifteen of rest is gentle as intervals go — the effort is short, and the recovery gives back half as much time again, so you claw back most of what each round costs you. Ten rounds run 7:15, and not one of them should feel like a fight.

It pairs naturally with movements that stay clean when you tire — air squats, marching or jogging on the spot, incline push-ups, an easy row. Treat it as your on-ramp: run it a couple of times a week, and once every round feels the same from first to last, shorten the rest toward 30/10 or stretch the work out to 40/20. The editor is there when you want to add rounds or a warmup.

Good to Know

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 30/15 a good first interval workout?
It is one of the best places to start. The 2:1 ratio keeps the work short and the rest meaningful, so you learn to pace an interval session without blowing up — and the whole thing is over in 7:15.
What exercises suit a 30/15 timer?
Anything you can keep clean for thirty seconds and scale down when tired: air squats, step-ups, marching or jogging on the spot, modified push-ups, light rowing or cycling. The goal is ten controlled rounds, not heroics.
When should I move on from 30/15?
When every round feels the same from the first to the tenth. From there, cut the rest toward 30/10 to raise the intensity, or lengthen the work to 40/20 — both are a tap away in the editor.