Track Time Without Leaving Your Browser
Install the TimeClock 365 Chrome extension and clock in with one click — right from your browser toolbar. Perfect for office teams who spend their day on a computer.
One-Click Clock In & Out
Employees do it all directly from their browser — no switching apps, no extra logins.
Clock in with one click from the browser toolbar.
Clock out in one click — attendance recorded instantly.
Mark breaks without leaving the browser.
Resume tracking with a single click.
See current clock-in status at a glance.
Ideal for Office & Remote Work
Full Location Control
Allow clock-ins only from approved IP addresses — office or home.
Automatically identify where the employee is working from.
Employees declare their work location when punching in.
Managers get notified of unusual clock-in patterns or locations.
Helps the Organization
Browser reminders reduce forgotten punches.
Real-time data — no manual entry, no memory gaps.
No switching between apps or systems.
Accurate hours feed directly into payroll reports.
Connected to the Full Attendance System
All punch data flows into manager dashboards automatically.
Absence requests and approvals in one place.
Timesheets reviewed and approved with one click.
Late arrivals, missing punches and anomalies flagged instantly.
Accurate hour totals ready for payroll processing.
Part of a Full Workforce Management Platform
Frequently Asked Questions
How does the Chrome Extension work?
Employees install the TimeClock 365 Chrome Extension and clock in or out directly from their browser toolbar. One click starts or ends the work day, records breaks, or checks attendance status — no separate login required.
Can clock-ins be restricted by IP address?
Yes. TimeClock 365 supports IP restriction so employees can only clock in from approved networks — such as the office or a specific home IP. This prevents buddy punching and ensures accurate attendance data.
Which teams is the Chrome Extension best suited for?
The extension is ideal for office teams, remote employees, hybrid workers, call centers, tech companies and support teams — any employee whose primary work device is a computer running Chrome.