What Is a Night Cycle?

A night cycle is an option created in 1979, for the purposes of processing Automated Clearing House (ACH) transfers (debits and credits) at night – generally between 10:00 p.m. and 1:30 a,m. Eastern Standard Time (EST). The ACH is a nationwide system for transferring money electronically that is sometimes referred to as the "nighttime window."

The Basics of Night Cycles

Corporations use night-cycle processing to move funds into concentration accounts, which are centralized deposit accounts used by institutions to aggregate funds and process and settle internal bank transactions. It stands in contrast to the day cycle, which allows processing of ACH transfers between 8:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. EST.

The Automated Clearing House specializes in processing high-volume, low-value payments. The relatively low fees it charges encourage business and the infrastructure was created to facilitate large payment batches so that large numbers of payments may be made simultaneously.

The credit transfers the ACH facilitates vary widely in nature and may include payroll, direct deposit, vendor payments and retail payments. It also accommodates direct debit collections which include consumer payments such as insurance premiums, utility bills and mortgage loans. Because ACHs are net settlement systems, any given settlement may experience a delay of up to several days, which can trigger a degree of settlement risk.