Best Times to Post by Niche (And Why Your Own Analytics Beat Any Chart)
The best time to post is whenever your specific audience is awake, bored, and holding their phone. Generic charts get you in the ballpark, but your own analytics tab is the real answer. Use the windows below as a starting point, then let your data overrule them within two weeks.
The honest disclaimer first
I'll say this loudly because most articles bury it: a chart that says "post Tuesday at 11am" was averaged across millions of accounts in every timezone and niche. Your gaming audience in Manila behaves nothing like a US fitness audience. So treat any published window as a hypothesis, not a rule.
Here's what actually moves views in 2026: the algorithms on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube Shorts push new content to a small test pool first. If that pool engages quickly, you get a bigger push. Posting when your followers are active raises the odds of a strong first 30 minutes. That's the whole mechanism. Time-of-post matters because of the early-engagement test, not because of magic.
Starting windows by platform
These are reasonable defaults to test against. Times are local to where most of your audience lives.
| Platform | Weekday windows | Weekend |
|---|---|---|
| TikTok | 6–9am, 12–1pm, 7–10pm | 9–11am, 7–11pm |
| Instagram Reels | 11am–1pm, 7–9pm | 10am–12pm |
| YouTube Shorts | 12–3pm, 6–9pm | 9am–12pm |
| YouTube (long-form) | post 2–3pm so it's ready for the evening watch session | Sat morning |
| X / Twitter | 8–10am, 12–1pm, 5–6pm | lighter; mornings only |
The evening blocks are the most reliable across niches because that's the post-dinner scroll. If you only test one window, test 7–9pm local.
Adjust by niche
The window shifts with what your audience is doing during the day.
- Beauty & fashion — late morning and early evening. People plan looks before going out, so Thursday–Saturday early evening tends to overperform.
- Gaming — late. 8pm–1am is genuinely strong, and weekends run later. Gamers are night owls; don't fight it.
- Fitness — bookends of the day. 5–7am for the morning-workout crowd, 5–7pm for the after-work crowd. Sunday morning is huge for "plan your week" content.
- Food & cooking — pre-meal. Lunch ideas land 10:30am–12pm, dinner ideas 4–6pm. Recipe saves spike Sunday afternoon during meal prep.
- Knowledge / business / finance — weekday business hours plus the commute. 7–9am and 12–1pm. These audiences barely touch the apps on weekends, so don't waste your best content on Saturday.
How to find your real best time in 2 weeks
This beats every chart, and it takes one screenshot a day.
- Open your platform's analytics. TikTok: Analytics → Followers → "Most active times." Instagram: Professional Dashboard → Total Followers → "Most active times." These show when your followers are online by hour and day.
- Pick your audience's top three active hours. Schedule posts to land 30–60 minutes before those peaks, so your video is already gathering engagement when the crowd arrives.
- Post one piece per day for 14 days, varying only the time. Keep topic and format roughly consistent so you're testing time, not content.
- After two weeks, look at which posts hit their first 1,000 views fastest. That hour is your slot. Everything else is noise.
One thing people miss: consistency of day matters more than perfection of hour. Showing up daily teaches the algorithm and your audience when to expect you. A mediocre time you hit every day beats a "perfect" time you hit twice a month.
Don't sabotage a good time with a slow start
Timing only gets the video in front of the test pool. The first three seconds decide whether that pool stays. If your hook is weak, the perfect posting time won't save you, and you'll wrongly blame the schedule.
Two practical checks before you post:
- Tighten the open. If you need fresh angles, our free creator tools include a hook generator you can use without signing up.
- Make sure the video isn't dragging. Run the cut through the script timer to confirm your hook lands inside the first two seconds and the whole thing stays tight.
Frequency beats obsessing over the clock
If I had to choose, I'd take three solid posts a week at a "good enough" time over one perfectly-timed post a month. Volume gives the algorithm more shots to find your audience, and it gives you more data to find your real window. Build a repeatable cadence first, optimize the hour second.
FAQ
Does posting time actually matter, or is that a myth? It matters indirectly. The time itself isn't magic, but posting when your followers are active improves your early engagement, which is what triggers a wider push. On a small or new account it matters more, because you're more dependent on that initial test pool.
Should I delete and repost if a video flops at a bad time? No. Reposting the identical video rarely helps and can look spammy to the algorithm. Make the next one better instead. If the concept was strong, film a fresh version with a sharper hook and post it at your tested window.
How long before I trust my own analytics over a chart? Give it two weeks of daily-ish posting. You need roughly 10–14 data points before patterns separate from luck. Until then, use the windows in this guide.
What if my audience is spread across many timezones? Pick the timezone where the largest share lives and optimize for that, then accept you can't please everyone. Evening posts (7–9pm) in your primary timezone usually catch a workable slice of the others too.
Does the day of the week matter more than the hour? For weekday-skewed niches like finance and B2B knowledge, yes — avoiding weekends matters more than nailing the exact hour. For entertainment and gaming, weekends are prime time. Match the day to your niche first, then refine the hour.