The purpose of this study is to verify the development and validity of a time structuring scale for adolescents, a pattern of pursuing recognition stimulation based on the theory of transaction analysis. To this end, 166 preliminary questions were produced based on the concept of transaction analysis's time structure, and 90 questions were selected through content validity verification. The subjects of the study were 2,095 adolescents(848 men and 1,247 women), who were middle and high school students aged 15 to 18 living in large cities, and the final 60 questions were selected as the main survey questions through two preliminary survey data analysis. For the suitability of factor analysis of the preliminary question, the KMO sample suitability and Bartlett sphericity test values were suitable. In addition, as for the number of factors in factor analysis, six factors (withdrawals, rituals, activites, pastimes, games, and intimacy) suggested by the theory of transaction analysis were identified as the main components, and a total of 60 questions, 10 questions for each factor, were selected as time structuring scale. As a result of reliability verification, the internal consistency Cronbach's α between items was .890-.751, and in the case of test-retest, the test was .892-.772, and the re-test was .904-.791. In the case of the reliability of the split-half, the odd-numbered questions were .821-.615, and the even-numbered questions were .838-.639. It was found that the time structuring scale developed through this can be used as a standardized test tool for adolescents. Finally, the significance and limitations of this study and future research were suggested.