Choose your timezone, audience, video type, channel type, region, and goal. The calculator returns ranked YouTube upload windows, opportunity scores, a weekly heatmap, and times to avoid.
Your Timezone
Target Audience Age
Content Type
Account type
Audience region
Primary goal
Last updated: June 2026
Current YouTube studies do not agree on one universal posting time. Buffer’s recent YouTube data gives strong weight to morning windows for long-form videos, while other social timing studies still point to weekday afternoon or evening slots. Use the calculator as a test plan: separate Shorts from long-form videos, publish before the viewer peak, and validate the result in YouTube Studio.
Use this quick baseline before personalizing the calculator. Current public studies agree that YouTube timing helps, but they disagree on the exact winner because Shorts, long-form videos, regions, and channel types behave differently.
Strong test days
Tuesday, Friday, Sunday
Good starting points across long-form and weekend viewing patterns.
Long-form baseline
Morning to midday
Test 7 AM-12 PM before assuming afternoon is best.
Shorts tests
Lunch and evening
Shorts can behave more like scroll-based feeds than long-form uploads.
Avoid
12 AM - 6 AM
Usually too early for the first viewer session and subscriber notifications.
Test Tuesday morning, Friday midday, and Sunday morning for long-form videos. Use afternoon or evening slots for Shorts and entertainment tests.
Generic studies are a starting point. Your best time is the window before your own viewers are active and ready to watch.
YouTube is less instant than short-form feeds. Processing, notifications, thumbnails, and early watch behavior all matter.
The calculator is not claiming proprietary access to every YouTube channel. It blends public timing studies, YouTube upload behavior, and your inputs into a practical starting schedule.
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We use current public research from scheduling and analytics platforms as a baseline for day and hour patterns.
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Your timezone, audience age, and region adjust the baseline so recommendations reflect local viewer behavior.
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Shorts, long-form videos, lives, tutorials, reviews, and business videos are weighted differently because they ask for different viewing behavior.
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Treat the result as a test plan. After several weeks, compare it with viewer activity, CTR, watch time, retention, subscribers, and comments.
Use this table as a practical baseline, then adjust with YouTube Studio after several weeks of testing Shorts and long-form videos separately. Morning windows are especially important for long-form testing.
Monday
Best: 9:00 AM - 11:00 AM
Secondary: 8:00 PM - 10:00 PM
Useful for steady long-form uploads and weekly planning content.
Tuesday
Best: 8:00 AM - 11:00 AM
Secondary: 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
One of the strongest long-form testing days in current YouTube data.
Wednesday
Best: 7:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Secondary: 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Good for morning long-form tests and afternoon evergreen uploads.
Thursday
Best: 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM
Secondary: 7:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Mixed across studies; useful as an evening or early-morning test.
Friday
Best: 11:00 AM - 3:00 PM
Secondary: 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Good for videos viewers may watch into the weekend.
Saturday
Best: 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Secondary: 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Useful for entertainment, lifestyle, food, and Shorts tests.
Sunday
Best: 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Secondary: 6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
Strong for planning, education, and week-ahead creator content.
Different channel types should prioritize different viewing moments. Use these notes with the calculator rather than treating them as fixed rules.
Prioritize repeatable upload windows, weekend tests, and evening availability where subscribers can watch longer sessions.
Use Wednesday through Friday for product education, launches, explainers, and trust-building videos.
Test lunch, afternoon, and evening browsing windows with clear product context and links.
Morning, lunch, and evening windows match workout planning, routines, and habit content.
Align uploads with meal planning and weekend browsing: late morning, lunch, and early evening often work best.
Morning routine and evening inspiration windows are useful for tutorials, reviews, and launches.
Prioritize focused weekday windows when viewers can watch longer lessons and save resources.
Use weekday afternoon windows for thought leadership, tutorials, demos, and webinars.
YouTube Shorts, long-form uploads, lives, tutorials, and reviews behave differently. Use the calculator above to match timing to the video you plan to publish.
Shorts can respond to lunch and evening scroll sessions, but they should still be tested separately from long-form videos.
Long-form videos usually benefit from being scheduled one to three hours before the audience viewing peak.
Lives need real-time availability, so evening windows and weekend slots often work better than workday mornings.
Tutorials and how-to videos fit focused viewing windows: morning, lunch, and afternoon are strong starting points.
Reviews perform best when viewers have purchase intent, especially lunch, afternoon, and evening browsing windows.
Educational videos should be scheduled before focused viewing sessions so viewers can watch and save the video.
Business videos work best in weekday work-adjacent windows with clear search intent and a strong thumbnail.
For mixed content, start with weekday afternoons and weekend mornings, then refine with YouTube Studio data.
Avoid 12 AM to 6 AM in your audience timezone unless your analytics show overnight viewing. Long-form videos should also avoid being published after the audience peak because processing and notifications need lead time.
Open YouTube Studio Analytics, review the Audience tab and the “When your viewers are on YouTube” report, then compare views, CTR, watch time, retention, subscribers, and comments by day and hour.
The calculator is designed around public 2026 research and practical YouTube behavior. We cite sources transparently because major studies differ by Shorts, long-form videos, region, and channel type, so your own YouTube Studio data should settle the final schedule.
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Buffer YouTube timing studyBuffer analyzed 1.8 million Shorts and long-form videos and found many strong morning windows for long-form videos, which is why the calculator separates video type and does not rely on a single afternoon answer.
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Metricool social media studyMetricool’s 2026 social media research includes YouTube and highlights that Shorts, videos, and audience data can point to different best windows.
03
Sprout Social YouTube timing researchSprout Social provides current YouTube and Shorts timing benchmarks and reinforces that high-engagement windows vary by channel and content type.
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Hootsuite best time guidanceHootsuite frames posting time as a tool-driven workflow, supporting a calculator-first page that users can test before reading deeper guidance.
What is the best time to post on YouTube today?
It depends on today’s weekday, your timezone, and your channel’s audience graph. Use the calculator for today’s top window, then confirm it in YouTube Studio.
Does posting time still matter on YouTube?
Yes, but it is not the main ranking factor. Timing helps early viewer availability, while title, thumbnail, watch time, retention, and content quality decide long-term performance.
What is the best day to post on YouTube?
Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday are strong starting points in current studies, while Saturday and Sunday mornings can work well for entertainment, lifestyle, and creator channels.
Should I post YouTube Shorts and long-form videos at the same time?
Not always. Shorts can work closer to scroll-heavy windows, while long-form videos often need one to three hours of lead time before peak viewing.
Should I use YouTube Studio instead of a calculator?
Use both. A calculator gives a fast starting point, while YouTube Studio confirms when your own viewers are active and which upload windows actually perform.