Pick a window, a duration, and the people. MeetSlot scans everyone’s calendar and shows only the slots where you’re all free — then sends the invite.
Choose a date and the earliest start / latest end — say, anytime between 11 AM and 6 PM — plus how long the meeting should run.
Start typing a name. The same autocomplete you know from Google Calendar pulls matches from your contacts and your organization’s directory.
MeetSlot overlaps everyone’s free/busy and lists only the times you’re all open. Pick one, name it, and the invite goes out — with an optional Meet link.
It reads everyone’s free/busy, merges the conflicts, and only surfaces times that work for the whole group.
Title, optional description, and the event lands on every calendar — add a Google Meet link with a single checkbox.
Avatars, names, and emails in a dropdown that looks and feels exactly like the one in Google Calendar.
Set any time range and duration — 30, 60, 120 minutes — and choose how finely to slice the options.
It detects your signed-in account and lets you switch to another with a tap before you schedule.
There’s no MeetSlot backend. Everything happens in your browser, talking only to Google’s APIs.
Google only reveals someone’s free/busy if they’re in your Workspace organization or have shared their calendar with you. For outside guests, their calendar appears free — MeetSlot tells you when that happens, so there are no surprises.
Add MeetSlot to Chrome, connect your Google Calendar, and let it find the time. Setup takes a few minutes.
MeetSlot is in developer preview. A one-click Chrome Web Store install is on the way — for now it loads in under a minute.
chrome://extensions and turn on Developer mode.