
Add Structure to Your Timeline with Lanes (Group by)
Timeline lanes let you group events into parallel tracks, making complex work easier to read by team, phase, category, or status.

Timeline lanes let you group events into parallel tracks, making complex work easier to read by team, phase, category, or status.

Timeline templates give you a ready-made starting point for roadmaps, launches, onboarding, biographies, and school projects.

Timetoast's structured timeline tools are available on the free plan, including custom fields, views, and more flexible timelines.

Single-select fields give timeline events one clear status, phase, owner, or category, making project timelines easier to scan.

Filtering helps you focus across timeline views by teams, topics, statuses, and selected fields.

Multi-select fields and color-coded grouping help organize complex projects by teams, phases, categories, and other timeline details.

The Timetoast beta adds custom fields, flexible views, and a grid editor for building richer, more structured timelines.

Early access lets Timetoast users try new features before general release and help shape improvements before they roll out.

The Timetoast Help Center gives you clearer articles, search, and support resources for common product questions.

The people page keeps user invites, signup codes, and account management simpler for teams using Timetoast.

Premium account holders can use simpler collaboration controls, including the option to make timelines editable by other account members.

Individual timeline sharing makes it easier to give specific Timetoast users access without relying only on groups.

Year-only dates make timeline creation more flexible when the exact month or day is unknown, especially for historical events.

Timeline color customization gives Pro users more control over embedded timelines and helps timelines match their own sites.

Timetoast's newer timeline design is the default across desktop and mobile, with a cleaner view that no longer relies on Flash.

Timeline embeds bring the newer Timetoast timeline design to external sites, with better resizing, HTTPS support, and cleaner code.

Designer Silvia Giulianini explains the thinking behind Timetoast's visual identity and how it represents shared stories over time.

Timetoast's visual identity uses cleaner shapes, bolder colors, and a more flexible foundation for the product.

The HTML5 timeline editor replaces the old Flash editor and adds BCE date editing support for desktop timeline creation.

BCE date support helps you create ancient history timelines with BCE events and timespans alongside modern dates.

Database improvements help Timetoast timelines and embedded timeline pages load faster across the site.

Signup codes make it easier for teachers and account owners to invite students or team members into a premium Timetoast account.

This product update explains progress on HTML5 timelines, including mobile improvements, event editing, and a smoother timeline experience.

Learn why Timetoast moves from Flash to HTML5 and how that shift supports modern interactive timelines.

Print-friendly timelines give you a dedicated print button and a cleaner way to create paper copies of your timelines.

A behind-the-scenes server upgrade helps Timetoast pages process faster and makes timeline loading feel snappier across the site.

Timetoast's HTML5 timeline editor brings mobile editing into the browser and helps move timeline creation beyond Flash.

Premium support gives paid Timetoast users a faster way to ask questions, get help, and share feedback through live chat.

Timetoast's mobile website helps phone and tablet users view timelines comfortably, with mobile editing noted as the next step.

Start here for the Timetoast blog: product updates, future plans, feature notes, and practical tips for making better timelines.