CME’s 24/7 Crypto Futures May End the Classic Bitcoin Weekend Gap
CME Group (CME) is preparing to move crypto futures and options to near-24/7 trading starting May 29, 2026, in a change that could cause the familiar “Bitcoin weekend gap” to disappear on the world’s largest derivatives exchange. This plan still depends on regulatory review, but if it proceeds on schedule, it will bring an important part of the regulated crypto derivatives market in the U.S. closer to Bitcoin’s continuous trading rhythm.
This change could fade the role of the “CME gap” in Bitcoin price analysis, while helping institutional investors hedge weekend risks directly on a regulated venue.
CME Moves Crypto Futures Toward 24/7 Trading
CME first announced plans to open 24/7 crypto futures and options trading in February 2026, with an expected deployment date of Friday, May 29, 2026, after completing the regulatory review process. According to the plan, these contracts will trade continuously on CME Globex and CME ClearPort. Instead of taking a two-day weekend break, CME’s crypto derivatives products will operate closer to the 24/7 rhythm of the digital asset market.
This is a notable move because CME is a crucial venue for institutional capital. Bitcoin futures on CME are commonly used to hedge exposure, trade the basis, and manage risk in a regulated environment. The previous weekend pause often made it difficult for institutions to react in time when the spot market experienced high volatility outside traditional trading hours.
For traders, the CME gap may gradually lose its role as a technical signal. When futures no longer rest for the entire weekend, the gap between Friday’s closing price and Sunday’s reopening price will no longer be a default feature of Bitcoin futures.
How The New Schedule Will Work
According to CME, crypto futures and options contracts will still have a brief maintenance window. From Monday to Friday, trading pauses for 2 minutes daily around the end of the session. On Saturday, CME has a longer maintenance window, from 2:00 a.m. to 4:00 a.m. CT.
The new schedule still keeps some technical pauses, so “24/7” does not mean trading absolutely never stops. If the spot market moves sharply during these maintenance windows, price gaps can still appear. However, compared to the model of closing for the entire weekend, the new schedule will significantly reduce the period during which CME futures cannot respond to Bitcoin prices on the spot market. Trades executed from Friday evening to Sunday evening, or on holidays, will be assigned a trade date of the next business day; clearing, settlement, and regulatory reporting will also be processed on the next business day.
The product scope does not revolve solely around Bitcoin. CME’s filing on the weekend market maker program lists futures contracts linked to Bitcoin, Ethereum, and several major altcoins such as Solana, XRP, Chainlink, Cardano, Sui, and Avalanche, along with their micro versions. CME can choose up to 7 market makers to support weekend liquidity.
The Bitcoin Weekend Gap, Explained
The Bitcoin weekend gap is the spread between the closing price of CME Bitcoin futures on Friday and the reopening price on Sunday. It appears because the Bitcoin spot market still trades over the weekend, while CME futures previously suspended trading.
CME Bitcoin futures. Source: TradingView
In the market, this gap is often monitored for the price’s tendency to return and test the empty zone after CME opens. With the 24/7 schedule, this setup may gradually lose its significance because futures no longer have to reflect the entire weekend volatility in a single reopening session.
CME cited the U.S. Strategic Crypto Reserve event on March 2, 2025, as an example: the crypto spot market gained about $300 billion in market capitalization over the weekend, and Bitcoin futures reopened with a gap of around $10,000. When futures trade through the weekend, such movements can be reflected gradually instead of concentrating into the reopening session.
Institutional Demand Behind The Shift
CME’s move comes as demand for crypto derivatives on the exchange surges. According to CME, cryptocurrency futures and options reached nearly $3 trillion in notional volume in 2025. By the time CME announced its plan, average daily volume (ADV) reached 407,200 contracts, up 46% year over year, while average daily open interest reached 335,400 contracts, up 7%.
These metrics indicate that crypto derivatives have become a significant liquidity segment on CME, where institutional investors use futures and options to hedge exposure, trade the basis, and manage risk in a regulated environment.

2020-2026 Spot Bitcoin Daily Volatility. Source: CME Group
The demand to extend trading hours is also supported by data on weekend volatility. According to CME’s analysis for the period from January 1, 2020, to March 8, 2026, weekend volatility for spot Bitcoin was equal to about 75% of weekday volatility. The average daily move during the week was 3.10%, while on weekends it was 2.33%.
With crypto, many major events can occur outside traditional trading hours, ranging from policy news to liquidation cascades or volatility on offshore exchanges. The 24/7 schedule helps reduce the time institutions must wait for CME to reopen, switch to other venues, or hold unhedged exposure.
The Limits Of Round-The-Clock Trading
Opening trading through the weekend may eliminate the traditional CME weekend gap, but it does not eliminate all price differences. Maintenance windows still exist, especially the 2-hour window on Saturday. If the spot market experiences sharp movements during this timeframe, futures can still reopen at a price significantly different from before maintenance.
Despite the market maker program, weekend spreads and depth are hard to guarantee as equivalent to main weekday trading sessions, particularly when the market suffers a major shock.
Therefore, the largest impact of the launch is not making Bitcoin less volatile, but erasing a structural gap caused by CME’s old trading schedule. If deployed according to plan on May 29, 2026, the “weekend gap” could shift from a familiar setup into a rarer phenomenon, depending more on liquidity and technical pauses.



