Every 10 Minutes Cron Expression for Azure
0 */10 * * * *Try it live
Valid
MINMinute
0HRHour
9DOMDay of Month
*MONMonth
*DOWDay of Week
1-5In plain English
At 09:00 AM, Monday through Friday
English → Cron
Try: "every 5 minutes", "every weekday at 9am", "every Monday at 3pm", "every month on the 1st"
Next 10 Executions
UTC- 1Mon, May 18, 09:00 AM UTCin 3d
- 2Tue, May 19, 09:00 AM UTCin 4d
- 3Wed, May 20, 09:00 AM UTCin 5d
- 4Thu, May 21, 09:00 AM UTCin 6d
- 5Fri, May 22, 09:00 AM UTCin 7d
- 6Mon, May 25, 09:00 AM UTCin 10d
- 7Tue, May 26, 09:00 AM UTCin 11d
- 8Wed, May 27, 09:00 AM UTCin 12d
- 9Thu, May 28, 09:00 AM UTCin 13d
- 10Fri, May 29, 09:00 AM UTCin 14d
crontab entrybash
# Add to crontab with: crontab -e
0 9 * * 1-5 /path/to/your/script.shWhen to use this schedule
- ▸ Syncing user session state to a persistent store every 10 minutes
- ▸ Polling for configuration changes in feature flag systems
- ▸ Aggregating 10-minute trading windows for financial analytics
- ▸ Certificate rotation checks that don't need per-minute precision
Platform Syntax Comparison
The same "Every 10 Minutes" schedule expressed in every major platform's cron syntax.
| Platform | Expression |
|---|---|
| Standard Linux/Unix | */10 * * * * |
| GitHub Actions | */10 * * * * |
| Google Cloud Scheduler | */10 * * * * |
| Kubernetes CronJob | */10 * * * * |
| Azure Functions (NCRONTAB) | 0 */10 * * * * |
| AWS EventBridge | 0/10 * * * ? * |
| Quartz Scheduler | 0 */10 * * * ? |
| Spring @Scheduled | 0 */10 * * * * |
| Jenkins | H/10 * * * * |
| Apache Airflow | */10 * * * * |
Frequently Asked Questions
Does */10 align to clock boundaries? ▾
Yes — it fires at :00, :10, :20, :30, :40, and :50 every hour.