The “me-time” I tried to create in my calendar for years kept getting used up by meetings and quick calls. A twenty-minute writing block would become fifteen, then ten, then gone.
I’ve tried a lot of productivity setups to deal with this, including Android’s built-in focus modes, but Google Calendar has been my main planning tool for years.
It’s been good for tracking meetings and deadlines, but not so great at actually protecting the time I’d set aside for myself. Then, I looked more carefully at Focus Time, a feature I’d been ignoring all along.
Apparently, the thing that would have fixed my me-time sprawl was already waiting in the event type dropdown, and I’d just never used it properly.
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How Focus Time works in Google Calendar
It’s more than just a scheduled Do Not Disturb
Focus Time is its own event type in Google Calendar, alongside regular events, tasks, and out-of-office blocks.
You create it the same way you’d create a meeting, but it shows up on your calendar with a small headphones icon and behaves differently from other event types.
The two things it does automatically are what make it so useful. It mutes Google Chat notifications during the block, and it can automatically decline meetings scheduled during that time.
I was setting these up weeks in advance after I got the hang of it.
For example, I had a recurring Tuesday morning block for focused work, a Friday afternoon block for admin catch-up, and a couple of one-off blocks around specific deadlines. None of that required me to go back and toggle anything each week.
One aspect I particularly like is that the headphones icon is visible on shared calendars. That way, my coworkers can see that they didn’t miss a meeting — I’ve just put that time aside on purpose.
How the auto-decline decides what to reject
New invitations, existing invitations, or both
When you enable auto-decline, you can choose whether it rejects only new meetings or both new and existing meetings already sitting inside the block.
If I set up a Focus Time block on Wednesday afternoon for something I need to finish by Friday, I don’t necessarily want to cancel the three meetings already on my calendar. But I do want to stop new ones from being added.
“Only new meetings” handles that automatically.
Something I didn’t notice at first is that the decline comes with a message to the organizer, and it’s customizable if you don’t want the default.
I set mine to a single line that says I’m in a focus block and gives a window for when I’m free again. That way, it reads less like an automated dismissal and more like a regular out-of-office reply.
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Tweaking the default settings
Some options work better for me than others
There are some meetings you can’t afford to decline automatically. If my manager sends me a one-on-one invite that ends up in a focus block, I’d want to know about it rather than have the calendar silently reject it.
Focus Time lets me toggle the Do Not Disturb setting independently of the auto-decline setting, so I can leave Chat notifications on for a specific block if I’m expecting something time-sensitive.
I can also turn off auto-decline entirely for a block that I want marked as focused time without the rejection behavior enabled.
One gotcha is that when you change any of these settings on a block, they become the new default for future Focus Time blocks you create.
I’ve been surprised by this twice: setting up a one-off block with lighter settings, and then a week later, wondering why my next focus block wasn’t declining anything. It’s worth a quick review whenever your needs change.
Which Google account types can use Focus Time?
Not available on personal Gmail accounts
Google built Focus Time as an enterprise Google Calendar feature, so it’s not available on personal Gmail accounts. It’s a Workspace exclusive, with access extended to the following account types:
- Business Standard
- Business Plus
- Enterprise Standard
- Enterprise Plus
- Education Fundamentals
- Education Teaching & Learning Upgrade
- Education Standard
- Education Plus
- Nonprofit
That rules out many casual users, and it’s not worth upgrading to a Workspace plan solely for this feature. But, if you’re already on one for other reasons, it’s a real benefit that’s easily missed.
What Focus Time does for productivity
The cost of each interruption is higher than you think
Research by Dr. Gloria Mark at UC Irvine found that the average worker is interrupted every 11 minutes, and it takes 23 minutes and 15 seconds to recover fully from each distraction.
You lose that time, not during the distraction itself, but afterward while your brain figures out where it was. Add two or three of these on top of a day that was reserved for focused work, and you can watch hours wasted on context-switching.
That’s the difference with managing me-time manually. A blocked event reminds me to concentrate, while a Focus Time block actively prevents the event that would have broken my concentration from ever reaching me.
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Focus Time still has room for improvement
Focus Time does the fundamentals exceptionally well, but it’s still fairly inflexible when you look closely.
The auto-decline setting is all-or-nothing within a block. I’d like role-based exceptions, such as invites from my manager or a specific project group, while still rejecting everything else.
Right now, the workaround is either to leave auto-decline off and rely on willpower or to break the block into smaller pieces, which defeats the point.
More customization for the Do Not Disturb setting would also be great. Letting chats from specific people or threads through, the way most other messaging platforms now do, would make the feature feel more like a filter than a wall.
In the meantime, I’ll still be using Focus Time extensively in its current iteration, and you should too.


