Cron Every Sunday at Midnight
Cron expression 0 0 * * 0 means At 12:00 AM, on Sunday.
Cron expression to run every Sunday at midnight: 0 0 * * 0. A common schedule for weekly maintenance at the end of the work week.
Cron Expression
Common use cases
- Weekly maintenance windows
- End-of-week report archiving
- Running slow database migrations on low-traffic days
Want to customize this schedule?
Open it in the visual builder to tweak the expression interactively.
Open in BuilderNeed to monitor this cron job?
Cronhub tracks your scheduled jobs and alerts you if they fail or run late.
Platform usage examples
# Edit your crontab
crontab -e
# Add this line to run every sunday at midnight
0 0 * * 0 /usr/bin/php /var/www/html/script.php
# Or run a shell script
0 0 * * 0 /home/user/scripts/job.sh >> /var/log/job.log 2>&1# .github/workflows/scheduled.yml
name: Scheduled Job
on:
schedule:
- cron: '0 0 * * 0'
jobs:
run:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Run job
run: echo "Running every sunday at midnight"apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: CronJob
metadata:
name: my-scheduled-job
spec:
schedule: "0 0 * * 0"
jobTemplate:
spec:
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: job
image: my-image:latest
restartPolicy: OnFailureRelated developer tools
More free tools for engineering workflows that pair with scheduled jobs:
Frequently asked questions
What is the cron expression for every sunday at midnight?
The cron expression is 0 0 * * 0. Cron expression to run every Sunday at midnight: 0 0 * * 0. A common schedule for weekly maintenance at the end of the work week.
How do I schedule a cron job to run every sunday at midnight in Linux?
Open your crontab with "crontab -e" and add a new line: 0 0 * * 0 /path/to/your/script.sh — this schedules your script to run every sunday at midnight. Save and exit; the cron daemon picks up the change immediately.
What does the cron expression "0 0 * * 0" mean?
Cron expression to run every Sunday at midnight: 0 0 * * 0. A common schedule for weekly maintenance at the end of the work week.
Can I use "0 0 * * 0" in GitHub Actions?
Yes. In your workflow YAML, set the schedule trigger: on: schedule: - cron: '0 0 * * 0'. GitHub Actions uses standard 5-field Unix cron syntax, so this expression works as-is.