Tablet time clock kiosk: when it works and what it should include
Why shared clock-in devices work well for shops, cafés, workshops and other frontline teams that operate from a physical workplace.
A time clock kiosk is a shared tablet, phone or device placed at the workplace so employees can clock in, clock out and record breaks. It is especially useful when most work happens at a physical location: a shop, café, restaurant, clinic, warehouse or workshop.
Compared with asking every employee to use their own phone, a kiosk reduces uncertainty and gives the team one clear place to record time. For many small businesses in Spain, it is the easiest way to digitise time tracking without changing the whole operating routine.
Less friction for frontline teams
Clocking in should be fast. If every employee needs to install an app, remember a password or rely on mobile coverage, missed entries increase. With a kiosk, the employee identifies themselves and records the movement in a few taps.
This works particularly well for shift-based teams, part-time staff and people who do not sit at a computer during the day. The device stays in the workplace and the manager knows records are linked to the right centre.
Time tracking by workplace
When a company runs several locations, where a clock-in happens matters. A kiosk can associate each record with a specific shop, café or site, making it easier to review incidents by location and spot missing entries at opening or closing time.
It also avoids specialised hardware in many cases. A correctly configured tablet can be enough if the software limits the device to the clock-in workflow.
What a good kiosk mode needs
A good kiosk should not expose the rest of the application. The screen should be limited to time tracking, avoid sensitive data and be easy for a manager to activate and link to a workplace.
Different identification methods may be useful: QR, PIN or short credentials. If biometric identification is considered, the company should review Spanish and EU data protection requirements carefully, because biometric attendance control is a sensitive area.
Handling missed clock-ins
A kiosk will not remove every mistake. Someone may forget to clock out or record a break late. The important point is that incidents stay inside the process: request, manager review, approval and audit trail.
That is the difference between a digital workflow and a WhatsApp correction. The final report shows what happened and how it was fixed.
Kiosk, mobile app or both
Kiosks work well for fixed workplaces. Mobile apps work better for supervisors, delivery roles, technicians or employees moving between locations. Many companies need both: a kiosk for most of the team and mobile clock-ins for people who travel.
Woblip includes kiosk mode and an employee app, so each business can choose the right clock-in method while keeping working time records centralised and exportable.
Take the theory to your day-to-day with
Start with Woblip. No lock-in, no card required.
Keep reading
All articles →Working time records for self-employed people in Spain
When a self-employed person in Spain needs time tracking, what changes when they hire employees and how to organise records without extra paperwork.
Time tracking for retail shops in Spain: how to do it well
A guide to recording working time in shops and small retail businesses with shifts, campaigns, cover staff and part-time employees.