Best Time to Post on YouTube: What 40 Million Videos Actually Show

Darryl Rentz & Uttaran Samaddar · 7 min read · Updated Jun 23, 2026
Reviewed by Darryl Rentz on Jun 26, 2026
4.720M+ creators
TL;DR: Post on Sunday or Saturday for a small but reliable edge, about +3.5% and +2.2% versus a channel's average day. The exact upload hour barely moves 30-day views, so match your audience's active window in YouTube Studio instead of chasing a single best time.

The best time to post on YouTube depends on your channel, and no single hour works for everyone. We analyzed 40.2 million U.S. YouTube uploads and found one consistent pattern: day of the week has a measurable effect on views, with Sunday and Saturday outperforming and Wednesday underperforming across channels.

What is the Best Time of the Day to Post on YouTube?

The honest answer: the exact hour matters less than most guides suggest.

When we grouped those 40.2 million videos by the hour they went live, the gap between the best and worst hours had shrunk to within a few percent by day 30. Early differences exist, but they equalize quickly.

What determines a strong early window is whether your audience is online when the video goes up. That is a channel-specific question, not a universal one. YouTube's "When your viewers are on YouTube" heatmap in Studio Analytics answers it directly for your channel.

If your channel is under 1,000 subscribers and your heatmap is too sparse to be useful, the general benchmarks by day below are your starting point. Past around 5,000 subscribers, your own data should override any generic guide, including this one.

When Creators Actually Upload

The chart below shows how many of the videos we analyzed were uploaded in each hour.

Bar chart of when 39.5 million U.S. long-form videos were uploaded by hour in Eastern time. Upload volume peaks mid-morning around 8 AM to noon at over 2 million videos per hour, with a smaller secondary bump at the 7 PM prime-time slot.

Most creators upload mid-morning (8 AM to noon Eastern, well over 2 million videos in each of those hours), with a smaller bump in the evening. But popular does not mean optimal. Since the hour has so little effect on total views, choosing a window that matches when your audience is active beats copying the herd.

When Is the Best Day of the Week to Post on YouTube?

Sunday is the best day to post on YouTube for most channels, followed by Saturday. Midweek, particularly Wednesday, tends to perform below average.

In vidIQ's analysis, where each upload is measured against its own channel's average day so channel size does not skew the result, weekends came out consistently ahead:

Bar chart of YouTube 30-day view performance by upload day of week for U.S. long-form channels, each measured against its own average day. Sunday is highest at about plus 3.5 percent and Saturday about plus 2.2 percent, while Wednesday is lowest at about minus 2.2 percent.
  • Sunday is the strongest day, about 3.5% above a channel's average day
  • Saturday is next, about 2.2% above the average day
  • Wednesday is the weakest day, about 2.2% below the average day

Here is how the full week breaks down, ranked by how each upload day performs against a channel's own average day:

Day

Audience activity

Saturday

High (about +2.2% vs your average day)

Sunday

Highest (about +3.5%)

Monday

Average (about even)

Tuesday

Below average (about -1.4%)

Wednesday

Lowest (about -2.2%)

Thursday

Below average (about -1.6%)

Friday

Slightly below average (about -0.5%)

How to Find Your Channel’s Best Posting Time in YouTube Analytics

Inside YouTube Studio, you can find a more concrete and realistic answer regarding the best time to upload your videos.

Inside Studio:

  • Click your profile image in the top right corner
  • Select Analytics from the left navigation
  • Click the Audience tab at the top

Look for the module labeled "When your viewers are on YouTube." The deeper the color, the higher the volume of viewers at that time.

For example, many of our viewers are on YouTube at 8:00 a.m. Pacific Time on Wednesday mornings while fewer viewers are online at 8:00 p.m. on a Friday evening.

YouTube Analytics navigation menu showing Audience tab

One important clarification: this report shows when people who watch your content are active on YouTube, not just when they are watching your videos specifically. Think of it as a map of when your kind of viewer is on the platform and more likely to open your video in that same session.

vidIQ’s Best Time to Post feature goes a step deeper than YouTube’s native report: it accounts for which of your viewers are most likely to engage at each hour, not just who is online.

showing how to use vidIQ's best time to post feature
vidIQ's Best Time to Post feature

Best Practices for Scheduling YouTube Uploads

Post before your peak, not at it. Uploading two to four hours ahead gives YouTube time to index the video, run initial click-through tests, and begin distribution before your viewers arrive. Dropping a video exactly at peak means it is still processing while your best window passes.

Factor in processing time. High-quality uploads, especially 4K, take time to process. Build that into your schedule so the video is ready before your target window.

If your audience is primarily in the US, 2 to 4 PM Eastern is a reasonable default. It covers the East Coast and reaches the West Coast during the lunch hour.

If you are using Premieres, the Premiere time is your upload time. Schedule the Premiere for your audience peak even if you uploaded the file hours or days earlier.

For time-sensitive content, timing matters more. A video about a breaking story or product launch loses relevance fast. Late is worse than imperfect for that type of content.

How Upload Timing Affects YouTube Performance

The hour effect is small on average, but it is not spread evenly. How much your posting window matters depends on what you make, and the figures below compare a channel's strong windows against its weak ones, not one hour against another. Time-sensitive and community-driven categories gain the most:

Bar chart of extra 30-day views from posting in a channel's strong windows versus weak windows by content type, US long-form, holdout-validated. News and Politics about plus 32 percent, Sports 29, Music and Entertainment and Film about 24, down to Howto and Style 15 and Travel 14.

News and Politics: about 32% ahead at 30 days

Sports: about 29% ahead

Entertainment and Film and Animation: about 24% ahead

Evergreen, search-driven content gains the least:

Howto and Style: about 15% ahead

Science and Tech: about 17% ahead

The rule of thumb: the more time-sensitive your content, the more your posting window matters. For search-driven content, YouTube will keep surfacing the video regardless of when you published it.

When is the Best Time to Post YouTube Shorts?

YouTube Shorts and long-form videos almost never share the same peak hour because viewer intent is different. Long-form viewers slot deliberate watch sessions into mornings and weekends, while Shorts viewers scroll in the evenings as unwind content.

Bar chart of when U.S. creators upload Shorts by hour in Eastern time, based on 80.3 million uploads. Volume peaks mid-morning around 11 AM at about 4.8 million, stays high through the workday, dips midday, rises again in the evening around 7 PM, and is lowest overnight.

This is when U.S. creators actually upload Shorts, based on 80.3 million uploads.

Practical rules for Shorts scheduling:

  • Schedule long-form for Sunday morning (verify in your Studio heatmap)
  • Schedule Shorts for Friday evening, with Tuesday and Wednesday evenings as the second tier
  • Never post a long-form video and a Shorts in the same four-hour window. They compete for the same notification slot in your subscribers' feeds
  • Post Shorts before the peak window. They are scored on whether viewers watch or swipe away in the first one to three seconds, so earlier posting gives the algorithm a wider test pool before the audience floods in

Consistency Matters More Than Clock Precision

YouTube's algorithm increasingly scores videos on session contribution: whether watching your video leads viewers to watch more YouTube afterward. This has a direct implication for how you think about posting time.

For established channels, consistency outweighs precision. The more watch history your channel has, the better the algorithm knows your audience and the better it can surface your videos when your specific viewers are online, regardless of the exact upload hour. A cadence you can actually sustain beats chasing a perfect time slot.

For new channels under 1,000 subscribers, the algorithm has limited audience data and falls back on broad signals like early click-through rate and watch time.

The algorithm also rewards channels that publish in clusters. A long-form video plus two or three related Shorts in the same week outperforms one isolated upload. That consistency signal compounds over time.

Key Takeaways

  • Upload hour has little measurable effect on 30-day view totals. Early differences equalize over time.
  • Day of week has a reliable effect. Sunday (about +3.5%) and Saturday (about +2.2%) outperform; Wednesday (about -2.2%) is weakest.
  • Check your channel's "When your viewers are on YouTube" heatmap in Studio and post around those windows.
  • Shorts and long-form need separate schedules. Creators upload both heavily mid-morning, but the two formats peak with different audiences.
  • For time-sensitive content (news, sports, entertainment) timing matters more; for evergreen, search-driven content it matters less.
  • Consistency beats precision. A cadence you can sustain is more valuable than a perfect upload hour.

FAQs

Does upload time really matter on YouTube?

Less than most guides claim. Our data shows that view-count differences based on the exact upload hour equalize by day 30, so the clock hour is not a major lever for total views. What does matter: the day of week (weekends run a few percent ahead), posting when your audience is online, and giving time-sensitive content an early-traction window. For breaking or event content, posting close to the moment still helps.

What's the best day to post YouTube videos?

Sunday is the strongest day in our analysis of 40.2 million U.S. long-form uploads, about 3.5% above a channel's average day, with Saturday second (about +2%) and Wednesday weakest (about -2%). The weekend edge holds across channel sizes and categories. Override these with your own YouTube Analytics if your data says otherwise.

Is it better to upload in the morning or evening?

On weekdays, evenings between 6 and 9 PM usually work best since people are done with work. On weekends, mornings or early afternoons tend to be more effective.

How far before my audience’s peak should I upload?

Two to four hours before peak is the standard recommendation, and the reason is mechanical, not algorithmic: YouTube needs that window to finish processing the video, generate auto-captions, and run early impression tests with a small slice of your subscribers and lookalike viewers. By the time your audience peak hits, the algorithm has already decided whether the video earned a broader push. For Shorts the lead time can be shorter (60–90 minutes), because Shorts process faster and the algorithm tests them in continuous batches through the day.

Does the YouTube algorithm punish you for posting at off-peak times?

No, the algorithm does not punish off-peak posting, but it cannot manufacture demand that does not exist. A video uploaded at 3 AM your audience’s time will sit with low impressions until the audience comes online, at which point YouTube starts surfacing it normally. But if you’re competing for the first-day boost, time-sensitive content, trending topics, launch days, posting near peak still matters.

When Should You Post on Weekends?

On Sunday, earlier is better. The strongest slot for long-form is around 10 AM in your audience's local time, when viewers are scrolling before the day fills up. On Saturday, late morning to afternoon works best, around 11 AM to 4 PM.