Introducing Single Attribution: Finer Control Over Billing
Clockk • August 25
When we first wrote about double billing and our new approach to multi-attribution, the response from our users was almost unanimously positive. People were confused by multi-attribution and loved the idea we proposed to make billing fairer and clearer.
Today we’re releasing exactly that.
What’s new
Until now, you were locked into multi-attribution. Every block was billed in full.
Although you always had full control, the control wasn’t obvious, and Clockk felt like it was acting unethically.
Now by default, only one client is billed at a time..
Set your overall preference in your account settings.

See exactly how attribution works in your activity view.


Decide, block by block, whether you want to bill just the non-overlapped time or the whole thing.

Why this matters
Many of you juggle projects that overlap in messy, real-world ways: a client call while updating slides, quick emails while running a report, or creative work while something else is in progress.
With this update, you get:
- Finer control over how time is billed.
- Flexibility to stick with a default that matches your style of work.
- Fairness built in, with safeguards against accidental double billing.
It’s the best of both worlds: automation when you want it, choice when you need it.
Your feedback shaped this
The first time we wrote about double billing, you told us that you wanted the change. It would make Clockk feel more fair and transparent. And you wanted full control.
This release is our response to that feedback. Thank you for pushing us to make Clockk better.
Try it today
Single attribution is the new default.
If you want the old multi-attribution, head to your account settings to set your attribution mode.
Or just click on an overlapped block in your activity view to try the new toggle.
We think this will make your timesheets faster, clearer, and more fair.
And as always — we’d love to hear what you think.
Ready to save time and find unbilled hours? Get Started