Austria In
Austria, prime time usually starts at 20:15 after the news broadcast of
ORF 1. Even though
ORF2 has its news from 19:30 to 20:00, they also start broadcasting prime time content at 20:15. The same applies for nearly all channels seated in Austria or
Germany that are broadcast in Austria.
Bosnia and Herzegovina In
Bosnia and Herzegovina, prime time starts at 20:00 and finishes at 22:00. It is preceded by a daily newscast (
Dnevnik) at 19:00 and followed by a late night newscast (
Vijesti) at 22:00.
Bulgaria In
Bulgaria, prime time starts at 20:00 every day (including weekends). Usually, the programmes aired are Bulgarian or Turkish series and reality shows, followed by a late newscast. The
Bulgarian National Television broadcasts
Po Sveta i u Nas at 20:00 and shows cultural and political programmes from 21:00 to 22:00, with series and late-night news following at 23:00.
Croatia In
Croatia, prime time starts between 20:00 and 20:15. Croatian public broadcaster
Hrvatska radiotelevizija broadcasts a daily newscast from 19:00 to 20:00. Also, many private broadcasters have daily newscasts either before or after the HTY newscast, at around 20.05, followed by the start of their own prime time. Many broadcasters without daily newscasts start their prime time at 20:00. Prime time generally ends between 22:00 and 23:00, followed by the late night edition of the network newscast and adult-oriented programming.
Denmark In
Denmark, prime time starts at 20:00.
Finland In
Finland, prime time starts at 21:00. It is preceded by a daily newscast at 20:30.
France In
France prime time starts at 21:10 (20:35 in the 1980s, 20:50 in the 1990s and 2000s, 21:05 in the 2010s).
Georgia In
Georgia, prime time starts between 18:45 and 20:00 and generally ends at midnight. However, on Friday night / Saturday morning, prime time usually continues until 1:00.
Germany At 20:00 each evening,
Das Erste (The First),
Germany's oldest public television network, airs the country's most-watched news broadcast, the main edition of the
Tagesschau, which is also
simulcast on most of its other specialist and regional channels (The Third). The conclusion of the bulletin 15 minutes later marks the beginning of prime time, as it has since the 1950s. In consequence, most other channels—public and private alike—also choose to start their prime time at 20:15. In the 1990s, the commercial channel
Sat.1 suffered a significant loss of audience share when it tried moving the start of its prime time to 20:00.
Greece In
Greece, prime time runs from 21:00 (usually following the news) to midnight.
Hungary In
Hungary, prime time on weekdays on the two big commercial stations (
RTL and
TV2) starts at 19:00 with game shows, tabloid, and docu-reality programmes. At 21:00, two popular soap operas air:
Barátok közt and
Jóban Rosszban, which follows at 21:30. American and other series, movies, talk-shows, and magazines run until 23:30. The prime-time lineup is preceded by daily news programmes at 18:30. At weekends, prime time begins at 19:00, with blockbuster movies and television shows. Before 15 March 2015, the public television station
M1 began its prime time with a game show at 18:30, which was followed by the daily news programme
Híradó at 19:30. After the news, the channel broadcast American and other series, talk shows, magazines, and news programmes until 22:00, after which came the daily news magazine
Este and the late edition of
Híradó. From 15 March 2015,
Duna began broadcasting all of the entertainment programming transferred to it from that date from M1, meaning that prime time on Duna now begins at 18:00, starting with the simulcast of the 18:00 edition of Híradó from the newly re-launched news channel, M1.
Iceland In
Iceland, prime time starts at 19:30. It is preceded by a daily newscast at 19:00.
Ireland In
Ireland, prime starts at 18:30 and ends at 22:00.
Italy In
Italy, prime time (called "prima serata") starts between 21:00 and 21:45 (main channels, including RTV) and ends between 23:30 and 00:30. On Friday and Saturday night, some shows last until 06:30–07:00. It usually follows news and, on some networks (like
Rai 1 and
Canale 5), a slot called "access prime time". Shows, movies, and sport events are usually shown during prime time.
Netherlands Much like in Germany, prime time in the
Netherlands usually begins at 20:30 in order to not compete with
Nederlanse Omroep Stichting's flagship 20:00 newscast.
Norway In
Norway, prime time starts at 19:45. On the
NRK1 channel it is preceded by the daily newscast
Dagsrevyen at 19:00. Locally, prime time is called ().
Poland In
Poland, prime time starts around 20:00 (sometimes 20:30). On
TVP1, it is preceded by a daily newscast at 19:30. On
TVN, the newscast is aired at 19:00, followed by the newsmagazine
Uwaga at 19:50 (weekdays) or 19:45 (weekends), and then the soap opera
Na Wspólnej at 20:05 (Monday to Thursday) or 20:00 (Friday to Sunday), various movies on Fridays, serials or films (winter and summer) on Saturdays, and programmes or films (winter and summer) on Sundays. On
Polsat, the news is aired at 18:50, followed by Gość Wydarzeń talk-show at 19:15, sports news and weather forecast.
Portugal Much like in Spain, prime time in
Portugal usually begins later at 21:30 and ends at 0:00 in order to not compete with
Rádio e Televisão de Portugal's flagship 20:00 newscast. Similarly, Portugal also has a second prime time, running from 13:30–16:00 which coincides with the extended
Portuguese lunch break.
Russia In
Russia television prime time is between 19:00 and 23:00 on working days and from 15:00 to 01:00 on holidays. On radio stations there are morning, day and evening prime times. The most common division: morning—6:30 to 10:00; day—~12:00 to 14:00; evening—16:00 to 21:00.
Slovakia Public television in
Slovakia consists of two channels; on the main channel (
Jednotka) prime time starts at 20:10, and on the second one (Dvojka) prime-time programming starts at 20:00. The two biggest private broadcasters set the start of prime-time programming at 20:20 (
Markíza) and 20:30 (
TV JOJ). Generally, however, prime time is considered to be from 20:00 to 23:00.
Slovenia In
Slovenia, prime time, the period in which the most-watched shows are broadcast, is from 8:00pm to 11:00pm. It is preceded by daily newscasts; Dnevnik RTV SLO (7:00pm – 8:00pm) on TV SLO 1, 24ur (6:55pm – 8:00pm) on POP TV, Svet na Kanalu A (6:00pm – 7:00pm; 7:50pm–8:0pm), and Danes (7:30pm – 8:00pm) on Planet TV.
Spain In
Spain, prime time refers to the time period in which the most-watched shows are broadcast. Prime time in Spain starts quite late when compared to most nations as it runs from 22:30 till 01:00. Most news programmes in Spain air at 21:00 for an hour and prime time follows. However, due to fierce competition, especially among the private stations prime time has even been delayed until 23:00. Most channels are delaying prime time in order to protect their top shows from sporting events. In the 1990s, prime time in Spain began at 21:00, moving to 21:30 in the latter half of the 1990s and 22:00 in the early 2000s. Commercial broadcaster
LaSexta and the second channel from the Public broadcasting
La 2 have attempted to shift prime time back to 21:30 in 2006 and Spring 2007, but these attempts have been unsuccessful. Fellow public channel
La 1 also tried to pull prime time back to 21:00 in early 2015, to no avail. The lateness in the start of prime time in Spain is also due to
Spanish culture. Spanish people generally work from 09:00–14:00 and then from 17:00–20:00 as opposed to the 09:00–17:00 which is common in other countries. The popular late-night show
Crónicas marcianas during the late 1990s–2000 also helped to extend prime time well into the early hours with the show being watched by a share of 40%, despite finishing at 02:00. Spain might also be unique in that it has a second prime time, running from 14:30–17:00 which coincides with the
extended Spanish lunch break. Shows airing in the secondary prime time period on many occasions beat those prime-time shows at night on a daily basis. The second prime time occurs only on weekdays, though and the slot is usually filled with
The Simpsons,
news,
soap operas and
talk shows.
Sweden In
Sweden, prime time starts at 20:00. It is preceded by a daily newscast at 19:30 and local news at 19:50.
Ukraine In
Ukraine, prime time () runs from 18:30 to 21:30 on working days and from 15:00 to 01:00 on holidays.
United Kingdom In the
UK, prime time (also known as
peak time) runs from 19:00 to 23:00. ==North America==