Graveyard shift
A graveyard shift is a work schedule that runs through the late night and into the early morning, typically from around 11 PM to 7 AM.
A graveyard shift is a work schedule that runs through the late night and into the early morning, typically from around 11 PM to 7 AM.
The name comes from the stillness of those hours, and the reality is much the same today. Industries that run around the clock, including healthcare, hospitality, logistics, security, and customer support, rely on the graveyard shift as a permanent part of their schedule. A hospital needs nurses at 3 AM just as much as at 3 PM.
How graveyard shifts work in practice
Graveyard shifts are usually fixed slots in a rotating schedule, picked up after a swing shift or late evening block. The overnight crew is often smaller than the day team, which means each person carries more individual responsibility. Handovers between outgoing and incoming teams matter more at this boundary, since fewer people are around to catch anything that slips through.
Some team members genuinely prefer nights, whether for personal reasons or because the quieter pace suits them. Others rotate in reluctantly. Knowing who is open to overnight hours makes building a fair roster much easier.
Common challenges
Working against the body’s natural sleep cycle affects alertness and recovery. Long stretches on nights without a break in the rotation wear people down, and that’s worth factoring into how the schedule is structured.
Coverage gaps hit harder overnight. If someone calls in sick at 2 AM, the pool of people available to step in on short notice is smaller than during the day. Having a clear process for filling open slots quickly reduces the pressure on whoever is already there.
Best practices for scheduling graveyard shifts
- Track shift preferences explicitly. Knowing who is open to nights saves time when building rosters.
- Limit consecutive graveyard shifts for any one person unless they have asked for more.
- Keep a clear handover process so incoming and outgoing teams stay aligned on what happened during the shift.
- Maintain an updated list of people available for last-minute overnight coverage.
How Zelos helps
Zelos lets managers post open graveyard shift slots and allows team members to claim them based on their own availability. Rather than tracking down cover for overnight gaps manually, managers can let the signup process handle it. This works well for teams where night shift willingness varies and the roster needs to stay flexible.
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