As a freelancer, your time is literally your product. Every hour you don't track is revenue you're leaving on the table. And every hour you spend on admin wo...
As a freelancer, your time is literally your product. Every hour you don't track is revenue you're leaving on the table. And every hour you spend on admin work (like setting up time tracking) is an hour you can't bill for.
Notion has become the go to tool for freelancers managing clients, projects, and tasks. But turning it into a reliable time tracking system? That's where most freelancers hit a wall.
Here's how to think about time tracking as a freelancer using Notion, and how to avoid the common pitfalls.
Most freelancers undertrack their hours. Studies consistently show that people underestimate how long tasks take by 25 to 50 percent. When you're billing hourly, that underestimation directly cuts into your income.
Beyond billing, accurate time data helps you understand which clients are profitable and which aren't. A client that pays well per hour but requires constant revisions might actually be your worst account when you look at the real numbers.
Time tracking also helps you price fixed rate projects more accurately. If you know a website redesign takes you 40 hours on average (not the 25 you guessed), you can price accordingly.
Most freelancers using Notion have some version of this:
A clients database with contact info, rates, and project details. A projects database linked to clients. A tasks database linked to projects with status, priority, and due dates.
This is a solid foundation. The challenge is adding time tracking without making the whole system clunky.
Approach 1: Add a "Hours" number field to tasks. You fill it in after completing each task. Problem: you're guessing. And you forget to fill it in half the time.
Approach 2: Build a separate time log database. Each entry has a task, date, start time, end time, and duration. Problem: maintaining this is tedious. You're now spending 15 to 20 minutes per day just logging time.
Approach 3: Use a Notion template with formulas. There are some clever templates out there with rollups, relations, and formulas that calculate totals per client and per project. Problem: they're fragile. One wrong formula edit and your totals break. And there's still no live timer.
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Get started free →All of these approaches share the same fundamental issue: they require manual input and don't integrate with your billing workflow.
The most effective approach for freelancers is to keep Notion as your project management hub and connect it to a dedicated time tracking tool like Clockify for the actual tracking.
Clockify gives you what Notion can't: a live timer, detailed reports by client and project, exportable data for invoicing, and a free tier that covers most freelancers' needs.
The problem has always been the gap between the two. You have tasks in Notion and a timer in Clockify, but connecting them means manual project creation and task matching in both tools.
TimeKnot bridges that gap. It pulls your Notion tasks into a time tracking interface and logs directly to Clockify. When you start a timer on a task, it creates the corresponding project and task in Clockify if they don't already exist.
Here's what a day looks like with this setup:
You open TimeKnot and see all your tasks from Notion, organized by client or project. You pick the task you're working on and click play. The timer runs in Clockify. You work. When you're done, you stop the timer. Move on to the next task.
At the end of the week, your Clockify account has accurate data for every client. You can generate reports, create invoices, and actually see where your time went.
No manual data entry. No switching between five tabs. No forgetting to log hours.
Let's say you bill at $75 per hour and currently undertrack by just 30 minutes per day. That's $37.50 per day, roughly $750 per month in untracked revenue.
Even recovering half of that through better tracking pays for any tool many times over.
And the time you save not managing spreadsheets and manual logs? That's time you can spend on actual billable work.
If you're a freelancer using Notion and you've been struggling with time tracking, the solution isn't a better Notion template. It's connecting Notion to a proper time tracker and automating the bridge between them.
TimeKnot makes that connection simple. Set it up once, and your Notion tasks become trackable in Clockify with a single click.