Every Sunday at Midnight Cron Expression for Quartz

0 0 0 ? * SUN

Try it live

Valid
MINMinute
0
HRHour
9
DOMDay of Month
*
MONMonth
*
DOWDay of Week
1-5

In 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
  1. 1Mon, May 18, 09:00 AM UTCin 3d
  2. 2Tue, May 19, 09:00 AM UTCin 4d
  3. 3Wed, May 20, 09:00 AM UTCin 5d
  4. 4Thu, May 21, 09:00 AM UTCin 6d
  5. 5Fri, May 22, 09:00 AM UTCin 7d
  6. 6Mon, May 25, 09:00 AM UTCin 10d
  7. 7Tue, May 26, 09:00 AM UTCin 11d
  8. 8Wed, May 27, 09:00 AM UTCin 12d
  9. 9Thu, May 28, 09:00 AM UTCin 13d
  10. 10Fri, May 29, 09:00 AM UTCin 14d
crontab entrybash
# Add to crontab with: crontab -e
0 9 * * 1-5    /path/to/your/script.sh

When to use this schedule

  • Weekly full backups on Sunday nights before the week starts
  • Sending weekly digest emails on Sunday midnight for Monday morning reading

Platform Syntax Comparison

The same "Every Sunday at Midnight" schedule expressed in every major platform's cron syntax.

PlatformExpression
Standard Linux/Unix
0 0 * * 0
GitHub Actions
0 0 * * 0
Google Cloud Scheduler
0 0 * * 0
Kubernetes CronJob
0 0 * * 0
Azure Functions (NCRONTAB)
0 0 0 * * 0
AWS EventBridge
0 0 ? * SUN *
Quartz Scheduler
0 0 0 ? * SUN
Spring @Scheduled
0 0 0 * * SUN
Jenkins
H 0 * * 0
Apache Airflow
0 0 * * 0

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this the same as @weekly?
@weekly is typically "0 0 * * 0" — Sunday midnight. So yes, for most cron implementations they are equivalent.

Related Expressions