Comparison guide
DevClocked vs Toggl
The short answer: Toggl Track is a manual, timer-based time tracker built for billing, clients and timesheets across any profession. DevClocked is automatic, developer-native analytics that measures engineering leverage and AI agent output. If you need to start/stop a timer and invoice a client, use Toggl. If you want to understand and improve what your code and agents produce, use DevClocked.
Last updated: May 22, 2026
At a glance
| DevClocked | Toggl Track | |
|---|---|---|
| Tracking style | Automatic | Manual start/stop timers |
| Primary use case | Developer output & leverage | Billing, timesheets, client hours |
| Audience | Developers (esp. AI-augmented) | Freelancers, agencies, all professions |
| AI agent tracking | Yes (first-class) | No |
| Output / leverage metrics | Yes | No (records hours only) |
| Invoicing / billing | No | Yes (strength) |
| Best for | Measuring what you shipped | Logging billable time |
| Pricing | Check current pricing | Free tier + paid; check current pricing |
What Toggl does well
Toggl Track is one of the best general time trackers on the market, and it's not close on its home turf. The timer is frictionless, the cross-platform apps are polished, and it's genuinely excellent for billing: project/client tagging, billable-rate tracking, reporting and invoicing-friendly exports. For freelancers and agencies who need to log hours against clients and get paid accurately, Toggl is a deservedly popular, mature choice. Its breadth across professions is a real strength.
Where DevClocked is different
Toggl measures time you manually log. DevClocked measures output you automatically produce — a fundamentally different job.
- Automatic, not manual. Toggl relies on you remembering to hit start and stop. DevClocked captures developer and agent activity automatically, so the data is complete and honest rather than dependent on discipline.
- Output, not hours. Toggl's unit is the logged hour. DevClocked's is leverage — what you shipped relative to the effort. A timer can't tell you whether an hour was productive; the Leverage Score can.
- Agent tracking. Toggl has no concept of AI coding agents. DevClocked treats Claude Code, Codex CLI and others as first-class.
- Developer-native analytics + design. Work Blocks, leverage trends and agent contribution are things Toggl simply doesn't model, presented in an interface built for developers.
Feature by feature
| Feature | DevClocked | Toggl Track |
|---|---|---|
| Automatic tracking | Yes | No (manual timers) |
| Manual timers | No (different model) | Yes (strength) |
| Billing / invoicing | No | Yes (strength) |
| Client/project time reports | No (dev-focused) | Yes (strength) |
| AI coding agent tracking | Yes | No |
| Token + cost tracking | Yes | No |
| Leverage / output metrics | Yes | No |
| Work Blocks | Yes | No |
| Leaderboard | Yes (Leverage Leaderboard) | No |
Pricing
Toggl has a capable free tier and paid plans aimed at teams and billing; DevClocked's pricing is on its site. They serve different needs — choose on use case, not price. (Verify current pricing before relying on it.)
Who should pick which
Pick Toggl if you need to track billable hours, invoice clients, or log time against projects — especially as a freelancer or agency working across multiple professions.
Pick DevClocked if you're a developer who wants automatic measurement of engineering output and AI agent leverage, without manually managing timers.
FAQ
For developers measuring output, yes. But they're built for different jobs: Toggl is manual time tracking for billing; DevClocked is automatic leverage and agent analytics for developers.
Toggl is primarily manual — you start and stop timers. DevClocked tracks developer and AI agent activity automatically.
No. Toggl tracks manually logged time and has no concept of agents or tokens. DevClocked tracks both.
If you need to bill clients, Toggl. If you want to measure what you and your agents actually produced, DevClocked. Some developers use Toggl for billing and DevClocked for output insight.
Verdict
Toggl is a best-in-class manual time tracker for billing and timesheets — keep it if that's your need. But it can't tell you what your work produced and doesn't know your AI agents exist. For automatic, developer-native leverage analytics, DevClocked is the right tool.