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If you only have a few minutes to spare, here’s what investors, operators, and founders should know about RescueTime (W08).
RescueTime is an active Seattle software company founded in 2007 and incubated in Y Combinator's Winter 2008 batch. Its desktop software observes the active application or website, classifies the time, and turns that record into reports, goals, alerts, and focus controls. YC listed the company as active with 15 team members in 2026.[1]
The premise of a death post-mortem does not survive contact with the evidence. RescueTime broke even by 2010, has served millions according to co-founder Tony Wright, and was still releasing documentation and revising plans in 2026.[2] Its more revealing story is how a durable product repeatedly tested the boundary between passive measurement and active behavior change without betraying the trust required to monitor people's computers.
RescueTime began with a problem its founders felt themselves. In early 2007, Joe Hruska and Tony Wright discussed how difficult it was to reconstruct a day spent across applications and websites. Wright proposed a background activity logger. Hruska produced the first prototype three days later. In a 2014 interview, Hruska said, “RescueTime began as a product that we built for ourselves.” He also captured the product's defining design decision: “RescueTime works because it does not rely on the user doing anything.”[3]
The team registered RescueTime.com and tested demand before the product was ready. A signup page showed a Photoshop mockup of the dashboard. It attracted a few hundred beta requests, then more after TechCrunch covered the concept. The evidence establishes that Hruska and Wright were working together by early 2007, but does not explain how they originally met. Brian Fioca later joined as a co-founder. YC describes him as a product engineer with more than 20 years across web, mobile, and desktop products, more than ten startup roles, and five founded companies.[1]
The initial vision was narrow: help information workers see where their computer time went, then let that knowledge influence future choices. The product soon added a business version, but the founding insight remained intact. Wright, who had previously worked at Jobster, took RescueTime through YC and handed control to his co-founders after four years.[2] That continuity matters. RescueTime did not need a dramatic reinvention to survive. It needed a sequence of bounded experiments around the same automatic data asset.
RescueTime replaces manual timesheets with passive observation. The desktop app records which application or website has focus, how long it remains active, and how the activity is categorized. It stops recording after five minutes of inactivity. It does not capture keystrokes, typed text, or page content, and users can pause tracking or remove records.[9]
The original system uploaded activity to a web account about every half hour. Users could tag programs, group activities, inspect reports, and share selected data with a team. Privacy shaped the product boundary from the first release: the system tracked focused programs and browser domains, not individual files.[10]
Over time, RescueTime moved from retrospective accounting toward intervention. Goals and alerts tell a user whether a day is moving toward a desired pattern. Focus Sessions block distractions. Calendar, Outlook, Slack, GitHub, Trello, and Asana connections place scheduled work and completed outputs beside observed time. The 2021 rewrite added a survey, a personalized Focus Goal, daily forecasts, progress meters, nudges, and end-of-day report cards. Fioca wrote that aggregate data placed typical knowledge workers at roughly two to three hours of focused computer activity per day.[7]
The product's distinction is not raw timing. Many tools can run a stopwatch. RescueTime builds a continuous personal record with little user effort, then uses that record to prompt a choice. Its current APIs expose historical logs, productivity breakdowns, alerts, calendar data, tasks, goals, devices, and Focus Sessions, with OAuth2 for third-party applications.[11]
RescueTime spans individuals who want an honest view of their attention and teams that need time evidence without traditional surveillance. The consumer wedge rewards privacy and self-direction. The team product adds shared reporting and timesheets, but the observed data does not establish which segment now supplies most revenue.
No authoritative 2024–2026 market-size estimate specific to passive attention analytics was found. Broad time-management figures would mix employee monitoring, billing timers, scheduling, and personal focus software, making them more decorative than useful. The firmer demand signals are RescueTime's long operating history, paid plans, millions of users claimed by Wright, and continued plan development.[2]
The category separates along two axes: automatic versus manual capture, and personal agency versus managerial oversight. TechRadar's 2026 comparison placed Toggl Track, Timecamp, ManicTime, and TMetric near RescueTime, while describing RescueTime as focused on goals and distraction blocking.[12] Operating systems also provide screen-time summaries, and specialist focus tools can block distractions without building a long-term activity history.
RescueTime's advantage is the combination of passive history, explicit privacy limits, and interventions. Its weakness is category ambiguity. A buyer may compare it with a free OS dashboard, a timer used for client billing, or an employer monitoring suite, even though each solves a different job. That ambiguity raises the cost of explaining why automatic personal evidence deserves a subscription.
RescueTime has sold subscriptions to individuals and businesses since its early years. In 2008, business accounts cost $4 to $8 per user each month and about 4% of roughly 100,000 users paid.[4] In December 2025 the company announced two Solo and two Team tiers, bundling Timesheets into the higher tiers after more than eight years without a price change.[13] Current annual list prices are $84 for Solo Focus, $144 for Solo+, $120 per Team user, and $192 per Team+ user.[14]
Revenue, retention, churn, and margins are not publicly disclosed. Wright says the company has generated tens of millions of dollars in revenue, but no audited source was found.[2] The available evidence supports a capital-efficient subscription business, not a precise unit-economics model.
The clearest early figures are about 100,000 users in September 2008, 5% weekly growth, and 4% paid conversion.[4] By the 2011 Introductions launch, TechCrunch reported 350,000 users.[5] Wright now claims millions served and tens of millions of dollars in cumulative revenue, but current active-user and revenue figures remain unavailable.[2]
The 2021 HN launch earned 207 points and 141 comments. Responses included a customer paying for almost a decade, Linux support requests, and privacy-focused comparisons with local-first alternatives.[7] That discussion is not a retention cohort, but it shows an unusually durable relationship with technically demanding users.
There is no death here to explain. No observed source documents a shutdown, acquisition, insolvency, or present decline. YC marks RescueTime active, current help pages were updated in June 2026, and the company changed pricing in late 2025.[1] Calling this a failure would replace evidence with the directory's framing.
The structural tension is subtler. Passive measurement is valuable because it demands nothing from the user. Hruska's phrase, “RescueTime works because it does not rely on the user doing anything,” describes both the wedge and the ceiling.[3] A report can reveal behavior without changing it. RescueTime's recurring attempts to add goals, alerts, distraction blocking, forecasts, nudges, and report cards show the company working across that gap. The outcome was not a failed remedy. It was a long product evolution that preserved automatic capture while adding optional intervention.
The 2011 Introductions experiment tried to convert usage patterns into recruiting matches. RescueTime said it would not share activity data with recruiters and would request permission before an introduction; 98% of surveyed users reportedly supported the concept under those controls.[5] The later adoption and revenue impact are unknown. The experiment reveals the core constraint: the data could support many businesses, but aggressive extraction would weaken the consent relationship that makes data collection possible.
RescueTime turned down at least two acquisition overtures in 2008, raised $900,000, and reached break-even in 2010.[4] Those facts argue against a story of venture-scale disappointment. The company survived by selling a recurring utility, keeping the monitoring boundary legible, and updating its product around changing work patterns. The unresolved question is whether that discipline capped growth. Public data cannot answer it. What the evidence can show is that RescueTime traded the spectacular outcome expected by a post-mortem template for something rarer: nearly two decades of continued operation.
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