Live status, 2026 calendar and America/New_York timezone
The NASDAQ opens at 9:30 AM New York time, i.e. 2:30 PM London time for most of the year. The close is at 4:00 PM ET, i.e. 9:00 PM London time. The window only shifts to 1:30–8:00 PM during two short transition periods, in March and late October–early November, because Europe and the United States do not change their clocks on the same weekend.
It is a 100% electronic exchange that concentrates most of the US tech giants: Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Nvidia, Meta, Alphabet or SpaceX.
This page covers everything you need to trade from Europe: exact hours in London time, the 2026 holiday calendar, pre-market and after-hours sessions, and why earnings releases often move prices after the close.
The NASDAQ follows a 6.5-hour regular trading window: 9:30 AM to 4:00 PM, New York time (ET). Five days a week, Monday to Friday. It is closed on Saturdays, Sundays and the US holidays listed below.
The time zone is America/New_York, i.e. UTC−5 in winter (EST) and UTC−4 in summer (EDT). On the European side:
NASDAQ vs NYSE: same hours, but two very different platforms. NYSE (New York Stock Exchange) and NASDAQ share exactly the same market hours (9:30 AM–4:00 PM ET). But the NASDAQ has no physical floor: since its creation in 1971, it has been a fully electronic platform. The NYSE, by contrast, keeps a floor on Wall Street run by Designated Market Makers (DMM) and floor brokers.
For the individual trader, that difference changes little in practice. The NASDAQ established itself as the home of tech stocks mainly because of its historically looser listing requirements and its tilt toward growth companies. Its digital nature has only reinforced that identity.
The NASDAQ Composite groups more than 3,000 stocks listed on the platform. The benchmark index for traders is the NASDAQ 100 (NDX), which concentrates the 100 largest non-financial caps. It is the one tracked by the NQ futures and ETFs like the QQQ. The two should not be confused: when the media talk about “a NASDAQ drop”, they usually mean the Composite, but the NASDAQ 100 is the instrument most traders actually work with.
The official NASDAQ session (9:30 AM–4:00 PM ET) is not the only active window. Two extended sessions bracket it, and they matter especially for anyone following Big Tech.
For a Europe-based trader, the NASDAQ after-hours falls between 9:00 PM and 1:00 AM London time. That is a real constraint. Most European traders place their orders before the close, or follow the results the next morning.
Important: order-execution rules differ outside regular hours. Check whether your broker offers limit orders, generally accepted in pre-market/after-hours, and whether the access hours cover the full window.
The NASDAQ follows the official US holiday calendar. In 2026, ten full closures are scheduled, plus two half-sessions at year-end.
| Date | Holiday | Session |
|---|---|---|
| Thursday, January 1, 2026 | New Year’s Day | Closed |
| Monday, January 19, 2026 | Martin Luther King Jr. Day | Closed |
| Monday, February 16, 2026 | Presidents’ Day | Closed |
| Friday, April 3, 2026 | Good Friday | Closed |
| Monday, May 25, 2026 | Memorial Day | Closed |
| Friday, June 19, 2026 | Juneteenth | Closed |
| Friday, July 3, 2026 | Independence Day (observed) | Closed |
| Monday, September 7, 2026 | Labor Day | Closed |
| Thursday, November 26, 2026 | Thanksgiving | Closed |
| Friday, November 27, 2026 | Day after Thanksgiving | Half-session — close 1:00 PM ET |
| Thursday, December 24, 2026 | Christmas Eve | Half-session — close 1:00 PM ET |
| Friday, December 25, 2026 | Christmas Day | Closed |
Note: the NASDAQ also runs two half-sessions in 2026, with an early close at 1:00 PM ET (6:00 PM London time), on Friday, November 27 (the day after Thanksgiving) and Thursday, December 24 (Christmas Eve).
The NASDAQ does not close for Columbus Day or Veterans Day, unlike some bond markets. From Europe, Memorial Day and Labor Day are the holidays that most often catch out beginners: the market is closed even though it is a working Monday in Europe.
Two windows concentrate the most favourable conditions for most strategies.
To follow the NASDAQ in real time from Europe, ProRealTime offers NASDAQ quotes with the NQ futures, Level 2 data and ProBacktest to test a strategy over ten years of data. Try ProRealTime for free.
Trading the NASDAQ from London, Paris or Frankfurt means working on a market that opens in mid-afternoon and closes in the evening. This setup has upsides and downsides.
Hours in London time:
| Session | New York time | London winter (GMT) | London summer (BST) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-market | 4:00 – 9:30 AM | 9:00 AM – 2:30 PM | 9:00 AM – 2:30 PM |
| Regular session | 9:30 AM – 4:00 PM | 2:30 – 9:00 PM | 2:30 – 9:00 PM |
| After-hours | 4:00 – 8:00 PM | 9:00 PM – 1:00 AM | 9:00 PM – 1:00 AM |
A practical rule for European traders: watch the US pre-market from 2:00 PM (about 30 minutes before the official open). The NQ futures already give a read on the likely direction of the session. Pre-market volume builds as 2:30 PM approaches.
The NASDAQ does not trade in the same time zone as the European exchanges. The overlap between the European session and the Wall Street open (2:30–4:30 PM London time) is the most active window of the day for a Europe-based trader: volume multiplies.
| Exchange | Open | Close | Main index | Time zone |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇺🇸 NASDAQ (New York) | 9:30 | 16:00 | NASDAQ-100 | ET (UTC−5/−4) |
| 🇺🇸 NYSE (New York) | 9:30 | 16:00 | Dow Jones / S&P 500 | ET (UTC−5/−4) |
| 🇬🇧 LSE (London) | 8:00 | 16:30 | FTSE 100 | GMT (UTC+0/+1) |
| 🇫🇷 Euronext Paris | 9:00 | 17:30 | CAC 40 | CET (UTC+1/+2) |
| 🇩🇪 XETRA (Frankfurt) | 9:00 | 17:30 | DAX 40 | CET (UTC+1/+2) |
| 🇯🇵 Tokyo (TSE) | 9:00 | 15:30 | Nikkei 225 | JST (UTC+9) |
Monday to Friday, except on the holidays listed above. The widget at the top of this page shows the live status with automatic conversion to your local time.
2:30 PM London time for most of the year. The window shifts to 1:30 PM only during the short clock-change periods, in March and late October–early November.
Both are US exchanges with the same trading hours (9:30 AM–4:00 PM ET). But the NYSE has a physical floor on Wall Street, whereas the NASDAQ has been 100% electronic since 1971. The NYSE hosts more financial and industrial groups (JPMorgan, Berkshire Hathaway, Coca-Cola); the NASDAQ concentrates technology companies (Apple, Nvidia, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, Microsoft, Tesla).
Because nearly all the Big Tech (Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Nvidia, Microsoft) report their quarterly results after 4:00 PM ET, in after-hours. These announcements often move prices several percent before the next official open. After-hours trades on electronic platforms with lower volume and wider spreads.
The NASDAQ Composite groups all the stocks listed on the NASDAQ platform, i.e. more than 3,000 companies. The NASDAQ 100 (NDX) selects the 100 largest non-financial caps.
Yes, exactly the same. Both exchanges follow the official US holiday calendar and close on the same dates.
Yes, via the pre-market (9:00 AM–2:30 PM) and after-hours (9:00 PM–1:00 AM) sessions, provided your broker offers them. Liquidity is lower and spreads wider outside the regular session. The NASDAQ 100 futures (CME) trade almost around the clock, from Sunday evening to Friday evening, which gives a read on direction even outside the sessions.
Maxime holds two master’s degrees from the SKEMA Business School and FFBC. As founder and editor-in-chief of NewTrading.fr, he writes daily about financial trading.