Weekly Review Checklist 20–30 min

I run my weekly review at 4:15pm on Friday afternoons, with a coffee and the door closed. It takes twenty-two to twenty-eight minutes, and it's the single highest-leverage habit I've added to my work in the last five years. The first time I tried it I was certain it would feel like another meeting; instead it gave me back roughly four hours of Monday mornings every week — the time I used to spend reorienting myself instead of starting.

The checklist below is what I actually run. It's not a twelve-step productivity ritual; it's five concrete prompts plus one writing exercise, all of which fit in under half an hour. The hardest part is committing to a fixed time. Friday afternoon works for me because energy's already low and I'm done with anything serious; Sunday evening works for many people I've recommended it to. Pick a slot, defend it for four weeks, and decide afterward. It pairs naturally with Today's Tasks, which keeps your list simple enough that the review actually fits in the slot.

Why a Weekly Review Matters

A weekly review helps you evaluate what worked, capture loose ends, and set priorities for the week ahead. Without reflection, tasks pile up and attention fragments.

Review done → clarity gained
Keep it lightweight: short review, big clarity.

Step 1: Clear Completed Tasks

Archive items you’ve finished. A clean slate keeps your list relevant and prevents old tasks from stealing attention.

Move to Completed
Move finished work off-stage to reduce noise.

How to archive in Today’s Tasks →

Step 2: Re-evaluate Priorities

Scan High, Due Today, and General. Promote anything urgent, demote anything that can wait. Less is more.

High Due Today General
Re-shuffle across lanes to reflect reality.

More on practical time management →

Step 3: Capture Loose Ends

Scan emails, messages, notebooks, and your head. Convert anything unfinished into clear, single-step tasks. If it takes under two minutes, just do it.

Gather everything into one trusted place.

Why digital lists make capture effortless →

Step 4: Plan Top Three Goals

Define three outcomes that would make next week a win. Block time for them now. Protect these blocks like meetings with yourself.

Goal 1 Goal 2 Goal 3
Pick three outcomes and protect the time.

7 quick productivity tips to support your top 3 →

Step 5: Reflect and Improve

Ask: What slowed me down? What moved the needle? Write one small change for next week—constraints and tiny habits beat willpower.

Small tweaks compound into big gains.

See how auto-reset keeps momentum →

Bring It All Together

Use Today’s Tasks as your weekly anchor. The three-lane layout helps you re-prioritize in seconds and start each week with clarity and focus.

Open the app and schedule your next review →

Weekly Review FAQ

How long should it take?

Plan for 20–30 minutes. If it regularly exceeds that, shorten the checklist or time-box each step.

Which day is best?

Friday afternoon (close the loop) or Sunday evening (prime the week). Consistency is the key.

Do I need extra tools?

No. The review works inside Today’s Tasks. A calendar helps for time blocking.