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Google Calendar will finally let you block time for a task instead of a meeting

A long-requested fix that turns simple checklists into protected, visible work sessions, giving your tasks the calendar space they always deserved.

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Screenshot of the Google Calendar new Tasks feature.
Google

What’s happened? Google has introduced a new capability in Calendar. Users can now block out time to work on a task (via Google Tasks) and mark themselves as “busy” during that time.

  • To use the feature, select an empty time slot in Calendar, choose “Task,” set the task name, duration, description, visibility, and other optional settings like “Do Not Disturb” or auto-decline meeting invites.
  • The feature has been rolling out to Rapid Release domains since November 6, 2025. Those in Scheduled Release domains will get it starting December 1, 2025.
  • The new Calendar feature will be available to all Google Workspace customers, Workspace Individual subscribers, and personal Google accounts.

Why is this important? The feature upgrades Tasks inside Calendar. Rather than the old workaround of creating a dummy meeting to block time, there’s now a built-in Task time-blocking option.

  • The new feature addresses a long-standing gap in the Google Calendar app, as many users have been using the workaround to block their time.
  • For organizations using Google Workspace, the feature allows professionals to share their critical work hours and time blocks with others.
  • Furthermore, Tasks are no longer just checklist items. They now have time in their Calendar, allowing users to plan their day more effectively.
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Why should I care? If you use Google Calendar for scheduling your work and meetings, you can now reserve time for crucial tasks (not just meetings) and let other users know you’re unavailable.

  • This feature helps you carve out explicit slots for your work and share it with your colleagues or clients.
  • Given that the feature is available to both personal Gmail account holders and Workspace users, creative individuals such as freelancers, designers, architects, or consultants can use it.

OK, what’s next? In the future, we may see Google expand this concept by adding more advanced options, such as recurring task time-clocks, deeper integration with focus mode features, or automation.

  • Developers or third-party tools that utilize Google Calendar or Tasks might build overlays or analytics around the new feature.
  • Google may expand the feature to include mobile enhancements, offline scheduling, or smarter suggestions.
Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
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