TikTok timing workspace

Best Time To Post On TikTok With PostHour

The best time to post on TikTok starts as a benchmark, not a promise. PostHour helps you pick sensible starting windows, test them against your own TikTok analytics and keep the slots that create stronger early engagement.

Use the planner when you need a first schedule, the template when you want to track a two-week test and the FAQ when you need short answers before posting.

The PostHour timing loop

1Choose three windowsStart with weekday afternoon, evening and one weekend comparison slot.
2Post comparable videosUse similar formats so timing is not mixed with creative quality.
3Review early signalsCompare the first 24 hours, then repeat the strongest slot before making it your default.
Benchmark firstUse public timing studies only as a starting point.
Analytics secondLet TikTok Studio viewer activity refine the schedule.
Two-week reviewKeep enough posts in each window to avoid noisy conclusions.
No reach promisesTiming helps distribution; it cannot rescue weak content.

Start with benchmark windows, then test your account

Current TikTok posting-time guides do not all agree. That is why PostHour turns the common windows into a small experiment instead of telling every account to post at one exact time.

Weekday baseline

Tuesday to Thursday

Test a 2 PM to 6 PM local-time window when you need a weekday starting point.

Audience routine

Evening slots

Test 6 PM to 11 PM if your audience tends to watch after work, school or daily errands.

Comparison slot

Weekend check

Keep one Saturday evening or Sunday morning slot in the first cycle before rejecting weekends.

Do not copy a posting time blindly

Posting time is useful only when it fits your audience location, viewer activity and content format. If a benchmark and your own TikTok analytics disagree, your account data should win.

The safer workflow is direct: pick three windows, post comparable videos, review early engagement and repeat the strongest slot before changing your regular schedule.

Audience

Check top territories and active times before choosing a local-time window.

Format

Compare similar videos. A tutorial, product clip and trend reply can behave differently.

Cadence

Review every two to four weeks, or sooner if your audience or content mix changes.

Build a TikTok posting schedule you can actually test

Start with a small set of windows, keep the comparison fair and let your audience data decide what stays in the schedule.