Back to home

MicroReps for Mac · Free

One minute.
Every hour.
Stay in flow.

MicroReps is a free native macOS app that nudges you to move for under 60 seconds once per work hour—push-ups, squats, planks, and more—then gets out of your way. No account, no cloud, no subscription: everything stays on your Mac.

MicroReps keeps you moving through the workday with ultra-short exercise sessions. No gym, no guilt, no disruption — just a quick set of reps and straight back to work.

// Mac App Store link coming soon

<60s per session
Hourly gentle prompts
0 accounts needed
100% on-device

How it works

Built around your workday.

Three steps. Under sixty seconds. Then back to what matters.

  1. 1
    MicroReps sends a notification

    Once an hour during your configured working hours, a native macOS notification appears with your exercise and rep count for this session.

  2. 2
    Complete the reps

    Stand up, knock out a set of push-ups, squats, or planks. The session target is always under 60 seconds so you never lose your flow.

  3. 3
    Tap done, get back to work

    One tap marks the session complete. MicroReps logs it, updates your streaks, and schedules the next session. You are back at your desk in under a minute.

Evidence review

The science behind micro-breaks

Very short, frequent movement breaks can interrupt desk work without derailing focus. Here is what published trials and large cohorts suggest — including honest limits and where MicroReps’s one-minute cadence still lacks a direct RCT match.

Recent workplace studies point to brief active “micro-breaks” (often about 2–3 minutes, every 30–60 minutes; one 2026 RCT used three minutes each hour) as a low-risk way to feel less fatigued and sometimes more alert. A 2026 Chinese office trial also reported meaningful metabolic shifts alongside small self-rated energy and productivity bumps.

At population scale, a Danish cohort (~70k workers) tied self-reported workplace micro-exercises to roughly 14% lower risk of long sickness absence (adjusted HR ≈ 0.86, 95% CI 0.77–0.96) — suggestive, but observational. Meta-analyses summarise active micro-breaks as small-to-moderate average gains in vigor (↑ d ≈ 0.36) and reductions in fatigue (↓ d ≈ 0.35).

Evidence quality is uneven: many RCTs are small, short, subjective, and hard to blind. No published trial tests exactly one minute every hour; MicroReps sits on the shorter end of the evidence ladder, so certainty for that dose should stay modest.

Active breaks look safe and can chip away at fatigue — think on the order of moving from roughly 50/100 to ~37/100 tired in one walking-break trial, with meta-analytic effect sizes around a third of a standard deviation. Productivity and pain stories are mixed; metabolic wins are clearest in a single recent hourly protocol. Proof for a strict 60-second-every-hour program is still thin.

Condensed from workplace micro-exercise evidence review (2015–2026 literature)

How to read this section

The material below summarizes research with headline numbers, named studies, and each paper's outcome metrics so you can see what the claims rest on.

If you only want the app, you can skim or skip this block entirely.

Effect sizes and the study table describe how researchers measured results — use them to compare studies at a glance, not as personal medical guidance.

~14% Lower long sick-leave risk Danish cohort (~70k): HR ≈ 0.86 for long-term absence among micro-exercise users (register-linked; confounding possible)
~37/100 Example fatigue level after breaks Walking micro-break trial: about −13.3 pts on a 0–100 fatigue scale at 4 h — illustrating 50 → ~37/100 scenarios from the literature
~82% Adherence in hourly RCT Fang et al. (2026) — 12 weeks, hourly 3-min bodyweight breaks in office workers

Evidence by outcome

Four themes the literature keeps returning to — with different levels of confidence.

Fatigue, energy, and mood

Most consistent storyline in the literature.

Meta-analyses of active micro-breaks cite roughly d ≈ +0.36 vigor and d ≈ −0.35 fatigue. Acute trials such as Wennberg et al. (2016) measured ~13-point drops on 0–100 fatigue scales within a single workday.

Musculoskeletal discomfort

Mixed signals — some promising RCTs, low certainty overall.

Exercise breaks beat passive rest in small desk-worker trials (e.g., Osama et al.), and clustered studies show quicker pain recovery, yet a 2024 Cochrane synthesis rates much of the pain evidence as very low certainty because schedules and measures vary widely.

Focus and perceived productivity

Unlikely to tank output; gains are subtle and often self-reported.

Fang et al. (2026) logged +1.3/10 self-rated productivity (p<0.001) alongside +1.6/10 energy, but objective throughput metrics remain uncommon and reviews often find null or task-specific cognitive changes.

Metabolic markers

Promising where measured — but almost no replication yet.

Fang’s hourly 3-minute protocol reported Δ fasting glucose −0.31 mmol/L, 2-hour glucose −0.58 mmol/L, and HOMA-IR −0.42 over 12 weeks. Other workplace break trials rarely publish labs, so treat this block as hypothesis-generating.

What research suggests

Energy, fatigue, and self-ratings

Bar length is illustrative — relative effect size, not a prescription. Meta-analytic and single-trial examples are shown together for context.

Metabolic markers (one hourly trial)

Fang et al. (2026) is the primary workplace RCT in this review with glucose and HOMA-IR data; bars scale to the largest reported shift for quick comparison.

Publication timeline

Landmark years represented in our comparison table below (including synthesis years such as 2024 systematic reviews cited against pain outcomes).

2015
2016
2020
2021
2022
2024
2026

Studies compared

Trials below mostly used 2–3 minute breaks every 30–60 minutes. Fang et al. (2026) is the closest cohort to hourly dosing; metrics reflect each publication's measures.

Study Design Intervention Headline result Metric
Fang et al. (2026) RCT (parallel)
N=86 office workers
Hourly 3-min bodyweight breaks vs 2-min walk Better glycaemia, waist, BP; higher energy (+1.6/10) & productivity (+1.3/10) Δ glu −0.31 / −0.58 mmol/L; HOMA-IR −0.42; p<0.001 vs control
Andersen et al. (2022) Prospective cohort
N≈70,130 workers
Employer-offered micro-exercise at work Lower long-term sickness absence HR 0.86 (95% CI 0.77–0.96)
Osama et al. (2015) RCT
N=32 desk workers
Exercise breaks vs extra rest breaks Greater pain reduction with exercise breaks p < 0.05 (subjective discomfort scales)
Akkarakittichoke et al. (2021) Cluster RCT
N=193 office workers
Active sit-stand prompts vs control Faster recovery, lower recurrence Recurrence HR_adj ≈ 0.22
Wennberg et al. (2016) Crossover RCT
N=19 adults
3-min walk every 30 min vs sitting Less fatigue over 7 h Δ fatigue −10.7 to −13.3 pts at 4–7 h
Mainsbridge et al. (2020) Pilot RCT
N=43 police officers
Movement micro-breaks Better mood, less job stress Significant at 3-month follow-up

Features

Smart by design.

Features that get out of the way and keep the reps coming.

Smart Scheduling

Set daily rep targets and MicroReps distributes them evenly across your working hours. Miss a session? Reps are silently redistributed to the rest of your day.

Progressive Overload

A configurable daily growth rate increases your targets over time. When you hit the 60-second ceiling, MicroReps introduces harder exercise variations instead of piling on reps.

Streak Tracking

Daily completion streaks and motivational nudges keep the momentum going without turning fitness into a chore.

Historical Charts

Visualize reps over time and completion rates. Watch your capacity grow week over week from a single app window.

Fully Configurable

Set your working hours, daily targets, growth rate, and which exercises to include. Snooze a session when you are in deep focus.

Native macOS

No Electron, no web wrapper. MicroReps runs as a native macOS app with system notifications that respect your Focus modes.

Screenshots

See it in action.

Everything visible, nothing cluttered.

Dashboard screenshot
Dashboard Today's exercises and progress at a glance.
Session Popup screenshot
Session Popup Under-60-second prompt — complete and move on.
History screenshot
History Rep history and completion rate over time.
Settings screenshot
Settings Configure hours, targets, and exercises.
Dashboard Schedule screenshot
Dashboard Schedule See how reps are distributed across your day.

Nothing to sign up for.

No account. No cloud. No telemetry. No ads. MicroReps lives entirely on your Mac — your exercise history never leaves your device.

  • All data stored locally
  • No network requests
  • No tracking or analytics
  • No subscription, ever

FAQ

Common questions.

Is MicroReps really free?

Yes — MicroReps is completely free with no in-app purchases, subscriptions, or ads.

Does MicroReps require an account?

No. MicroReps stores everything locally on your Mac. There is no account, no cloud sync, and no data leaving your device.

Which exercises are included?

Push-ups, squats, plank, jumping jacks, and more. You can enable or disable each exercise in Settings and MicroReps rotates through your active selection.

What happens if I miss a session?

Missed reps are automatically redistributed across your remaining sessions for the day. No rep gets left behind — it just moves forward.

Can I pause MicroReps during meetings?

Yes. Snooze a session right from the notification or the app window. MicroReps adjusts the schedule around you.

Does it work with macOS Focus modes?

MicroReps uses native macOS notifications, so your existing Focus mode settings apply. If you mute notifications during a Focus session, MicroReps respects that.

Start moving today.

Free. Forever. One minute at a time.

Download MicroReps for Mac (opens in new tab)

Requires macOS 13 or later · Mac App Store link coming soon.