Today-focused local time calculator
Best Time to Post on Facebook Today
Posting on Facebook today? Use the calculator to find the next local window and compare it with your audience time.
Find my posting timePosting schedule calculator
See the best times to post in your own timezone.
Post aroundThis is your suggested local posting time.
5:23 PM Today
Recommended test window: 5:08 PM - 5:52 PM
For your United States audience, that's Monday, 1:08 PM - 1:52 PM.
Audience: United States
Next best times to post today
Start with these recommended windows. We show your local time first, then the matching audience time.Reasons are based on your audience time.
Window: 5:08 PM - 5:52 PM
Audience time: Monday, 1:08 PM - 1:52 PM
Good for lunch-break browsing
Window: 8:11 PM - 9:11 PM
Audience time: Monday, 4:11 PM - 5:11 PM
Good for afternoon attention
Weekly plan
Plan your week with one recommended posting time for each day.Days are shown in your posting timezone.
Window: 5:08 PM - 5:52 PM
Audience: Monday, 1:08 PM - 1:52 PM
Window: 10:16 PM - 11:03 PM
Audience: Tuesday, 6:16 PM - 7:03 PM
Window: 5:19 PM - 6:18 PM
Audience: Wednesday, 1:19 PM - 2:18 PM
Window: 11:20 PM - 12:12 AM
Audience: Thursday, 7:20 PM - 8:12 PM
Window: 5:20 PM - 6:15 PM
Audience: Friday, 1:20 PM - 2:15 PM
Window: 5:01 PM - 5:57 PM
Audience: Saturday, 1:01 PM - 1:57 PM
Window: 10:06 PM - 10:58 PM
Audience: Sunday, 6:06 PM - 6:58 PM
Quick Answer
The best Facebook posting time today is the next useful audience window converted into your own timezone.
On this page, today means your local posting date. If every useful window has already passed, the calculator shows the next available window and labels it as tomorrow or the next day.
Current Status
Now
If you are inside a recommended window, the calculator marks it as a good time to post now.
Later today
If a window is still coming up today, the main card shows the nearest useful start time.
Next available
If today is over for your schedule, the result moves forward instead of showing an expired slot.
Posting Tips For Today
- Post 15-30 minutes before the window if you need the post to warm up.
- Separate page, group, and reel performance when reviewing timing.
- Weekend tests can be useful for casual or community-driven content.
Short Weekly Preview
Today gives you the immediate answer. Use the weekly schedule inside the calculator to avoid one-off decisions and build a repeatable testing rhythm.
How to read this Facebook recommendation
The calculator is designed to answer a practical publishing question: when should you post if your audience is in one place and you publish from another? It separates audience time from posting time, then gives you a local window you can actually put on a calendar.
For Facebook today, treat the result as a controlled starting point, not a permanent rule. The strongest posting window is the one that repeatedly improves the metric tied to your goal, such as views, saves, comments, follows, clicks, or sales.
Best Facebook time by goal
| Goal | What to prioritize | How to judge it |
|---|---|---|
| Community response | Lunch, evening, or weekend windows | Measure comments, replies, and group discussion depth. |
| Video reach | Relaxed viewing windows | Compare watch time and shares, not only reactions. |
| Local action | Planning windows before events or offers | Track clicks, messages, RSVPs, and page visits. |
Two-week testing plan
Choose one slot
Start with the calculator result and pick one repeatable 60-minute window.
Keep format steady
Compare similar Facebook content instead of mixing unrelated formats.
Track the first 24 hours
Record early reach, engagement, profile actions, and conversion signals.
Decide after patterns
Move the slot only after several posts show the same direction.
Common timing mistakes
| Mistake | Why it hurts | Better approach |
|---|---|---|
| Using an expired slot | A past window cannot help the post get early activity. | Use the next available window shown by the calculator. |
| Posting immediately without context | Now may be convenient for you but weak for the audience. | Check both local time and audience time before publishing. |
| Changing the plan after one post | One result can be caused by topic, creative, or competition. | Repeat the same window before judging it. |
What to do after you find a winning window
Once a window works, build a small posting system around it. Save the slot in your content calendar, prepare the post before the window starts, and review results with the same metric every week. This keeps timing decisions from becoming a daily guess.
If your audience, format, niche, or goal changes, rerun the calculator and test again. A window that works for reach may not be the same window that works for saves, sales, long comments, or follower growth.
Recommended next reads
Posting time tips & FAQ
Use the result as a starting point, then test it with your own content for two weeks.
What is the best time to post on Facebook today?+
The best time today is the next recommended audience window converted into your own posting timezone.
What if today's best posting time has already passed?+
The calculator moves to the next available window instead of showing an expired time as if it were still useful.
Should I still post on Facebook today if I missed the best time?+
Yes, if the content is timely. Use the next available window, then compare performance against your regular test slots.
Does the calculator use my local time?+
Yes. Audience time explains the recommendation, but the main result is converted into your selected posting timezone.
How should I test my best posting time?+
Start with one recommended window and test it consistently for at least two weeks. Keep the content format similar, then compare views, saves, comments, profile visits, follows, and conversions before changing your schedule.