Cron Expression Generator and Next Run Calculator – Master Cron Without the Guesswork
Cron syntax trips up even experienced developers. A visual cron expression generator and a next-run calculator eliminate the guesswork — build expressions without memorizing field order, then verify they fire exactly when you expect.
Cron syntax is one of those things developers look up every single time. Not because it’s hard — but because the five-field format is just opaque enough to cause doubt. Is the hour field before or after the minute? Does */5 mean every 5 minutes or starting at minute 5?
The “cron expression” tag on Stack Overflow alone has over 14,000 questions. That’s before you factor in the platform inconsistencies that multiply the confusion: Linux cron uses five fields, Kubernetes uses five fields with slightly different semantics, AWS EventBridge adds a sixth, and Quartz schedulers prepend a seconds field at the front.
Two tools cut through the noise: a visual cron expression generator that builds expressions from human-readable inputs, and a next-run calculator that shows you exactly when your job will fire — no guessing required.
Cron Syntax Refresher
The standard five-field cron format reads left to right: minute, hour, day of month, month, day of week.
* * * * *
│ │ │ │ └── Day of week (0–7, where 0 and 7 = Sunday)
│ │ │ └──── Month (1–12)
│ │ └────── Day of month (1–31)
│ └──────── Hour (0–23)
└────────── Minute (0–59)
A few common examples:
0 2 * * *— every day at 2:00 AM0 9 * * 1— every Monday at 9:00 AM*/15 * * * *– alle 15 Minuten0 0 1 * *— midnight on the first of every month
Simple in isolation. In practice, the ambiguity compounds: is 1 for the day-of-week Monday or Sunday? Does this platform support step values? This is where a generator earns its keep.
Tool 1: Cron Expression Generator
Der Cron-Ausdrucksgenerator turns abstract syntax into a point-and-click interface. Set values for each component — minute, hour, day, month, weekday — and the tool outputs the expression. No memorizing field order, no second-guessing special characters.
Two real-world walkthroughs:
Daily database backup at 2 AM
Set Minute to 0, Hour to 2, leave Day of month, Month, and Day of week as *. Output: 0 2 * * *. This fires at exactly 02:00 every day.
Weekly report every Monday at 9 AM
Set Minute to 0, Hour to 9, Day of month to *, Month to *, Day of week to 1 (Monday). Output: 0 9 * * 1.
Where the generator really shines is with step values and ranges — */5 (every 5 minutes), 1-5 (Monday through Friday), 0,12 (midnight and noon). These are the combinations where the mental overhead of raw cron syntax becomes a liability, and a visual builder makes the logic explicit before it reaches production.
Tool 2: Cron Next Run Calculator
Getting the expression right is step one. Confirming it fires when you expect is step two — and it’s easy to skip.
Der Cron-Nächster-Lauf-Rechner takes any cron expression and shows the next 10 scheduled fire times, calculated from right now. Paste in your expression, get the output immediately.
A practical use case: you’ve written 0 9 * * 1-5 thinking it runs Monday through Friday at 9 AM. Paste it into the calculator and the next 10 run times surface immediately — making it obvious whether you have the right range. If you accidentally wrote 0 9 * * 0-5 (Sunday through Friday instead), the next-run output shows a Sunday firing and you catch the bug before deployment.
This is faster than deploying a job, waiting, and checking logs — especially for jobs scheduled to run once a week or once a month, where a misconfigured expression might go undetected for weeks.
Platform Differences: Linux, Kubernetes, GitHub Actions, and AWS
This is where cron gets genuinely messy. The same expression can mean different things — or be invalid — depending on which scheduler runs it.
Linux cron (5 fields)
The original. Five fields: minute hour day month weekday. Configured via crontab -e. No seconds support. Day-of-week: 0 und 7 both mean Sunday.
Kubernetes CronJobs (5 fields)
Kubernetes uses the same 5-field format for its schedule: field — functionally equivalent to Linux cron. Step values and ranges work the same way. It does nicht add a seconds field despite what you may have read.
AWS EventBridge / CloudWatch Events (6 fields)
EventBridge uses a different 6-field format: minute hour day month weekday year. The year field is mandatory and cannot be omitted. It also uses ? anstatt * when a field is not applicable — you must use ? for either day-of-month or day-of-week, since specifying both is ambiguous.
GitHub Actions (5 fields, UTC only)
GitHub Actions accepts standard 5-field cron syntax in the schedule: trigger. All times are UTC. The minimum schedule interval is 5 minutes, and scheduled jobs may fire later than scheduled during periods of high load on GitHub’s infrastructure.
Quartz / Spring Scheduler (6–7 fields)
Java-based schedulers like Quartz and Spring Scheduling add a Sekunden field at the front: second minute hour day month weekday [year]. This means 0/5 * * * * ? fires every 5 seconds — not every 5 minutes. Easy to confuse if you’re switching between Java and Linux cron.
Common Cron Patterns
| Anwendungsfall | Ausdruck | When it runs |
|---|---|---|
| Alle 15 Minuten | */15 * * * * | :00, :15, :30, :45 each hour |
| Daily at midnight | 0 0 * * * | Every day, 00:00 |
| Daily backup at 2 AM | 0 2 * * * | Every day, 02:00 |
| Weekdays at 9 AM | 0 9 * * 1-5 | Mon–Fri, 09:00 |
| Weekly cleanup (Sunday midnight) | 0 0 * * 0 | Sundays, 00:00 |
| First of month at noon | 0 12 1 * * | 1st of each month, 12:00 |
| Jede Stunde | 0 * * * * | Top of every hour |
| Twice daily | 0 8,20 * * * | 08:00 and 20:00 daily |
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