Harvest provides two API interfaces, serving two distinct roles. If you need to access and manipulate your daily timesheet the Time Tracking API fits the bill. Notable uses of the Time Tracking API are the widgets we provide for PC and Mac as well as other third party timesheet software integrations.
If you need to access and edit your projects, clients, users and tasks the extended API is your choice. You can use this to mass import your existing projects setup, add users and generally integrate with your existing back-office setup.
Remember to write your application carefully, caching when possible. In case of abuse you may be blocked, disallowing further API access. As an act of courtesy, please provide User-Agent strings denoting your application.
If you're running into problems with a specific implementation, it's best to try the request in a client like Postman to try to narrow down where things are going wrong. If you're still having trouble, drop us a line. Please make sure to include the full request you're having trouble with, including any headers, so we can investigate the issue for you.
In many cases, the omission of the Content-Type
and Accept
headers are the root cause of unexpected errors from the API.
To help you get started with the Harvest API, we have provided sample scripts in several programming languages. These scripts depict authentication and basic API actions. Visit the Harvest API Samples GitHub project to take a look at the scripts.
You may also want to check out the open-source libraries for the Harvest API below.
Watch the Harvest API repository to receive email notification of updates to the API documentation. Find out when we've made tweaks to our documentation simply by clicking the eye symbol/watch selection in the upper right of this page.
If you've built something interesting with the Harvest API or the Harvest Platform, share the love! Created a library or other cool connector another Harvest user might find useful? Add it to our Community Creations and Hacks page, and contribute to the solid list of great projects people have made. If it's a connector between another app and ours, ping us at support@harvestapp.com — we may be able to list it on our Add-ons page.
All requests to the Harvest API are made on the behalf of an actual user (see the HTTP Basic Authentication or OAuth 2.0 Authentication sections for detail on authenticating your requests). You can use a regular account for requests against the Time Tracking API, but for private integrations accessing the Extended REST API we recommend creating a special admin user.
Harvest will check your role on each request, and actions that are unavailable to you on the UI will be unavailable over the API as well. Administrators can generally access all API resources, and regular users are limited to their own timesheets. Project Managers can access projects they manage in addition to their own timesheets.
The Harvest API supports both XML and JSON data formats.
For an XML request, send application/xml
in the Accept
and Content-Type
headers. Send application/json
for JSON responses. All examples in this documentation assume XML input and output, however JSON output follows similar structure to the XML documented.
We have an API throttle that blocks accounts emitting more than 100 calls per 15 seconds. We reserve the right to tune the limitations, but they are always set high enough to allow a well-behaving interactive program to do its job.
For batch processes and API developers who still need to perfect their code, this throttle may be an inadvertent blocker. Just wait and make no API calls (the throttle is reset with each call). The throttle will lift itself in a few minutes and API calls may resume.
When the rate limit is exceeded Harvest will send an HTTP 503 status code. The number of seconds until the throttle is lifted is sent via the Retry-After
HTTP header, as specified in RFC 2616. You can use GET /account/rate_limit_status
to programmatically query your current throttle status.
Throughout our documentation you'll find the following set of notational conventions:
-
#{expression}
: Should be substituted with the value of the expression. For example,/#{project_id}
should be replaced with/12345
(assuming yourproject_id
is 12345) -
...
: For brevity, we have skipped repetitive parts of the response. -
<!-- Comment -->
: Optional comment in the response added for clarity. The actual response will not contain comments.
A few of our users have implemented their own Harvest API wrappers. If you plan on writing a Harvest API client, you may want to check out some of these excellent projects:
- Ruby: Harvested, by Zach Moazeni
- Python: Harvest Time Tracking API Client, by Lionheart Software
- Python: Harvest API Wrapper, by Lann Martin and Brian Glass
- Java: Harvest Time Tracker Console Client, by Mauricio Offermann
- Java: Harvest Java Wrapper, by Dag Martin Mikkelsen
- PHP: HaPi - PHP Harvest API, by Matthew Denton
- Node.js: node-harvest, by Paul English
- Drupal: Harvest Module for Drupal, by ImageX Media
- .Net: Harvest.Net, by Joel Potter
We also have sample scripts in several languages. These scripts depict authentication and basic API actions. Visit the Harvest API Samples GitHub project to take a look at the scripts.
Please email us at support@harvestapp.com.