0 0 * * 6,0 explained
At 12:00 AM, only on Sunday and Saturday
At 12:00 AM, only on Sunday and Saturday
Runs Saturday and Sunday at 00:00. · 5-field cron
Next 5 runs (UTC)
| # | Run time (UTC) | When |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sat, Jun 20, 2026, 00:00:00 UTC | in 9h 13m |
| 2 | Sun, Jun 21, 2026, 00:00:00 UTC | in 1d 9h |
| 3 | Sat, Jun 27, 2026, 00:00:00 UTC | in 7d 9h |
| 4 | Sun, Jun 28, 2026, 00:00:00 UTC | in 8d 9h |
| 5 | Sat, Jul 4, 2026, 00:00:00 UTC | in 14d 9h |
Try it in your timezone
How to read this expression
| Field | Value | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Minute | 0 | exactly 0 |
| Hour | 0 | exactly 0 |
| Day of month | * | every value |
| Month | * | every value |
| Day of week | 6,0 | list 6,0 |
Related schedules
0 9 * * 1-5Weekdays at 9 AM
0 0 * * 0Every Sunday at midnight
0 0 * * 1Every Monday at midnight
0 17 * * 5Every Friday at 5 PM
FAQ
- Is "0 0 * * 6,0" a valid cron expression?
- Yes — it parses as a standard 5-field cron expression: At 12:00 AM, only on Sunday and Saturday.
- How do I use it?
- Paste it into your crontab, CI scheduler, or job runner. Need a different schedule? Edit the fields in the builder above or browse all common cron expressions.
Looking for a phrase instead? See every minute, every 5 minutes, every 10 minutes, every 15 minutes.