Tea Steeping Timer

A multi-infusion steeping timer that tracks each round of brewing for gongfu and Western methods. Select your tea type to get recommended steep times, then start the timer for each infusion with automatic time progression across rounds.

Calculator
0:30 10:00

Ready! Remove the leaves.

How to Use

  1. 1
    Select your tea type and brewing method

    Choose your tea category and whether you are brewing Western style or gongfu style to load the recommended steep time parameters for your session.

  2. 2
    Start the timer for each infusion

    Tap start at the moment you pour water onto the leaves; the timer counts down to your target steep and alerts you when each infusion is complete.

  3. 3
    Progress through successive infusions

    After pouring each infusion, tap "Next round" to advance the timer to the next infusion's target time, which automatically increases to account for progressive leaf hydration.

About

The difference between a transcendent cup and a bitter disappointment in tea preparation often comes down to seconds—particularly in gongfu brewing where multi-infusion sequences require precise timing progression across 8 to 15 rounds from a single leaf portion. The Tea Steeping Timer provides reliable countdown management for both Western single-steep and gongfu multi-infusion sessions, removing the cognitive load of tracking elapsed time so attention can be directed entirely toward the sensory experience of brewing.

The timer's multi-infusion sequences are pre-loaded with recommended timing progressions for each tea type, reflecting the leaf hydration curve that makes early infusions require shorter times and later infusions longer ones. Each tea category and brewing method—Western, gongfu, grandpa-style, cold brew initiation—has its own default sequence, and individual parameters can be adjusted mid-session when a particular tea is steeping more or less quickly than the default. Visual and audio alerts signal infusion completion without requiring attention to a clock or phone screen.

For newer tea drinkers developing their palate, the timer serves a pedagogical function beyond simple convenience: by consistently brewing at recommended times and temperatures, users build reliable sensory reference points for each tea type. Once a baseline is established through consistent timer-guided practice, intentional departures—shorter steep for more delicacy, longer steep for more structure—become productive experiments rather than random variations. The timer is designed to make consistent, reproducible brewing effortless so that the pleasure of tea drinking remains uninterrupted.

FAQ

Why do steep times need to increase across successive gongfu infusions?
Leaf hydration is a progressive process: dry leaf requires more time on the first and second infusions to open fully, but once hydrated the cells are primed for rapid extraction. By the third or fourth infusion most gongfu-brewed teas have reached full hydration, meaning subsequent steeps can actually be shorter while still extracting ample flavor. The classic gongfu timing progression accounts for this non-linear hydration curve with a brief first "rinse" or awakening steep (5–15 seconds), a short first true infusion (15–25 seconds), then gradually increasing times. As a tea session progresses into the later infusions—rounds 8 through 12 and beyond—the spent nature of the leaf genuinely requires longer extraction times to draw remaining flavor from depleted material, reversing the mid-session pattern. Understanding this curve allows brewers to adjust from the timer's baseline when a tea is extracting more or less quickly than expected.
How do I know if I have over-steeped my tea?
Over-extraction in tea produces a characteristic bitterness and astringency that signals polyphenols, particularly catechins, have been extracted in excess of the tea's palatable threshold. The sensation is a drying, tannic mouth-coating quality that persists on the palate well after swallowing, distinct from the pleasant structural tannin of a properly brewed black tea. In green teas, over-steeping also produces a specifically harsh, almost medicinal bitterness from excess chlorophyll extraction. Visual cues can precede taste: intensely dark green liquor from a green tea or very dark mahogany from a black tea being prepared at light steeping temperatures may signal over-extraction. The remedy is purely temporal—reduce steep time on subsequent infusions. For a steeped infusion already extracted too long, diluting with additional hot water partially reduces astringency, though it also reduces flavor concentration.
Does water temperature affect how long I should steep?
Temperature and time are reciprocally related in tea extraction: higher water temperature accelerates extraction exponentially, so a given flavor target can be reached with shorter time at high heat or longer time at moderate heat. This relationship is why gongfu brewing of oolong at near-boiling temperature (95–100°C) uses 15–45 second infusions, while cold brewing at refrigerator temperature (4–8°C) requires 6–24 hours to achieve comparable extraction. For Western brewing, the practical implication is that if your water temperature is lower than recommended—due to altitude, equipment limitation, or preference—extending steep time by 30–60 seconds can partially compensate. Conversely, accidentally overheating water above the recommended range for delicate green teas can produce bitterness within the recommended steep time window, requiring earlier pour-off to prevent over-extraction. The timer's baseline times assume the recommended temperatures for each tea type are being used.
How do gongfu timings differ for different oolong oxidation levels?
Oolong teas span an oxidation range from approximately 15% (lightly oxidized green oolongs like Jin Xuan or high-mountain Alishan) to 85% (heavily oxidized, often roasted Dong Ding or Wuyi rock oolongs). This compositional range requires different timing approaches. Lightly oxidized oolongs are more delicate and closer in character to green teas: first infusions of 20–30 seconds at 85–90°C allow flavor development without overpowering the floral top notes. Heavily oxidized and roasted oolongs support more aggressive brewing: first infusions of 30–45 seconds at 95–100°C work well, with the roasted compounds tolerating high-heat, longer extraction without turning harsh. Medium-oxidized oolongs like Dong Ding at moderate roast levels fall between these approaches. The timer's tea-type selection loads parameters appropriate to the oxidation and roast level of the selected variety rather than applying a uniform oolong timing to all styles.
Can I use the timer for Western brewing of multiple cups?
The timer supports Western brewing with single-steep and limited re-steep timing modes alongside gongfu multi-infusion sequences. For Western preparation—typically one steep of 2–5 minutes depending on tea type—the timer functions as a straightforward countdown with alert. For teas that support 2–3 Western re-steepings, such as many black teas and robust oolongs, the timer can be set to advance through sequential steeps with progressively longer target times, mirroring the gongfu logic at a coarser scale. The distinction between methods is primarily one of vessel size and leaf-to-water ratio rather than an absolute difference in timing logic. A teapot brewing 400 ml with 3 grams of tea and a 3-minute steep is Western-style; the same leaf weight in a 100 ml gaiwan with a 30-second steep is gongfu—both use the same underlying extraction principles with different ratio and time parameters.