Run a cron every 5 minutes but only on weekdays with */5 * * * 1-5.
The cron expression */5 * * * 1-5 runs every 5 minutes, but only on Monday through Friday (weekdays). The */5 step operator in the minute field combined with 1-5 in the day-of-week field creates a business-day-only schedule with 288 executions per weekday. Weekend runs are completely skipped. This schedule is commonly used for production monitoring, intraday report generation, stock market data polling, customer support queue checks, and CI/CD health checks that are only relevant when the team is working. For Quartz Scheduler, use 0 */5 * ? * MON-FRI. For AWS EventBridge, use cron(0/5 * ? * MON-FRI *). For Kubernetes CronJob, use schedule: "*/5 * * * 1-5" directly. If you also need to restrict to business hours (9 AM to 5 PM), use */5 9-17 * * 1-5 instead. This reduces executions to 108 per weekday.
The expression */5 * * * 1-5 means: at minute */5, hour *, day-of-month *, month *, day-of-week 1-5. Each field in the cron expression controls a different time component: minute, hour, day of month, month, and day of week.
Run crontab -e in your terminal to open your crontab editor. Add a new line: */5 * * * 1-5 /path/to/your/script.sh. Save and exit. Verify with crontab -l. Make sure your script is executable (chmod +x script.sh) and uses full paths for all commands.
Quartz Scheduler: */5 * * * 1-5. AWS EventBridge: cron(*/5 * ? * 1-5 *). Kubernetes CronJob: schedule: "*/5 * * * 1-5" (standard 5-field format). Each platform has slight syntax differences — use our dialect switcher above to get the exact expression.
Common pitfalls: (1) Cron uses a minimal PATH — always use full paths to commands and scripts. (2) Percent signs (%) must be escaped with backslash in crontab. (3) Cron runs in the system timezone — set CRON_TZ=UTC at the top of your crontab for consistent UTC scheduling. (4) Redirect output to prevent email spam: */5 * * * 1-5 /path/command >> /var/log/myjob.log 2>&1. (5) Test your cron expression with crontab.guru or our validator above before deploying.
The cron expression */5 * * * 1-5 has different syntax on various scheduling platforms. Here is the equivalent expression for each:
| Platform | Expression |
|---|---|
| Unix / Linux crontab | */5 * * * 1-5 |
| Quartz Scheduler (Java) | */5 * ? * 1-5 |
| AWS EventBridge | cron(*/5 * ? * 1-5 *) |
| Kubernetes CronJob | */5 * * * 1-5 |
| Vercel Cron | */5 * * * 1-5 |
| GitHub Actions | */5 * * * 1-5 (UTC) |
Key differences across platforms: Quartz uses 7 fields starting with seconds and supports L (last) and W (weekday) modifiers. AWS EventBridge requires a 6th year field and uses ? instead of * in day fields when the other day field is specified. Kubernetes uses standard 5-field Unix cron. Vercel Cron uses the same format but schedules are defined in vercel.json. GitHub Actions uses standard cron but runs in UTC timezone only, so adjust the hour field for your local timezone offset.
Follow these tips when setting up cron jobs in production: