Epoch & Unix Timestamp Conversion Tools. Date Converter, Time Converter

 

The current Unix epoch time is 
1654936608

 

Convert epoch, convert time to human-readable date and vice versa

 [batch convert]
Supports Unix timestamps in seconds, milliseconds, microseconds and nanoseconds.
Yr Mon Day
- -  
Hr Min Sec
 :   :   
 

 

 [batch convert]
Input format: RFC 2822, D-M-Y, M/D/Y, Y-M-D, etc. Strip 'GMT' to convert to local time.
 

Also see our dynamic list of dates (1 day ago, next week, etc.)
Press c to clear all forms.

Epoch dates for the start and end of the year/month/day

Show start & end of

Yr Mon Day
- -    
 
 [list months & years]


Convert seconds to days, hours and minutes

 

What is epoch time?

The Unix epoch (or Unix time or POSIX time or Unix timestamp) is the number of seconds that have elapsed since January 1, 1970 (midnight UTC/GMT), not counting leap seconds (in ISO 8601: 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z). Literally speaking the epoch is Unix time 0 (midnight 1/1/1970), but 'epoch' is often used as a synonym for Unix time. Some systems store epoch dates as a signed 32-bit integer, which might cause problems on January 19, 2038 (known as the Year 2038 problem or Y2038). The converter on this page converts timestamps in seconds (10-digit), milliseconds (13-digit) and microseconds (16-digit) to readable dates.

Human-readable time  Seconds
1 hour 3600 seconds
1 day 86400 seconds
1 week 604800 seconds
1 month (30.44 days)  2629743 seconds
1 year (365.24 days)   31556926 seconds

How to get the current epoch time in ...

PHP time() More PHP
Python import time; time.time() Source
Ruby Time.now (or Time.new). To display the epoch: Time.now.to_i
Perl time More Perl
Java long epoch = System.currentTimeMillis()/1000; Returns epoch in seconds.
C# DateTimeOffset.Now.ToUnixTimeSeconds() (.NET Framework 4.6+/.NET Core), older versions: var epoch = (DateTime.UtcNow - new DateTime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, DateTimeKind.Utc)).TotalSeconds;
Objective-C [[NSDate date] timeIntervalSince1970]; (returns double) or NSString *currentTimestamp = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%f", [[NSDate date] timeIntervalSince1970]];
C++11 double now = std::chrono::duration_cast<std::chrono::seconds>(std::chrono::system_clock::now().time_since_epoch()).count();
Lua epoch = os.time([date])
VBScript/ASP See the examples
AutoIT _DateDiff('s', "1970/01/01 00:00:00", _NowCalc())
Delphi Epoch := DateTimetoUnix(Now); Tested in Delphi 2010.
R as.numeric(Sys.time())
Erlang/OTP erlang:system_time(seconds). (version 18+), older versions: calendar:datetime_to_gregorian_seconds(calendar:universal_time())-719528*24*3600.
MySQL SELECT unix_timestamp(now()) More MySQL examples
PostgreSQL SELECT extract(epoch FROM now());
SQLite SELECT strftime('%s', 'now');
Oracle PL/SQL SELECT (CAST(SYS_EXTRACT_UTC(SYSTIMESTAMP) AS DATE) - TO_DATE('01/01/1970','DD/MM/YYYY')) * 24 * 60 * 60 FROM DUAL;
SQL Server SELECT DATEDIFF(s, '1970-01-01 00:00:00', GETUTCDATE())
IBM Informix SELECT dbinfo('utc_current') FROM sysmaster:sysdual;
JavaScript Math.floor(new Date().getTime()/1000.0) The getTime method returns the time in milliseconds.
Visual FoxPro DATETIME() - {^1970/01/01 00:00:00} Warning: time zones not handled correctly
Go time.Now().Unix() More Go
Adobe ColdFusion <cfset epochTime = left(getTickcount(), 10)>
Tcl/Tk clock seconds
Unix/Linux Shell date +%s
Solaris /usr/bin/nawk 'BEGIN {print srand()}' Solaris doesn't support date +%s, but the default seed value for nawk's random-number generator is the number of seconds since the epoch.
PowerShell [int][double]::Parse((Get-Date (get-date).touniversaltime() -UFormat %s))
Other OS's Command line: perl -e "print time" (If Perl is installed on your system)

Convert from human-readable date to epoch. Convert date time

PHP strtotime("15 November 2018") (converts most English date texts) or:
date_create('11/15/2018')->format('U') (using DateTime class) More PHP
Python import calendar, time; calendar.timegm(time.strptime('2000-01-01 12:34:00', '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'))
Ruby Time.local(year, month, day, hour, minute, second, usec ) (or Time.gm for GMT/UTC input). To display add .to_i
Perl Use the Perl Epoch routines
Java long epoch = new java.text.SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy HH:mm:ss").parse("01/01/1970 01:00:00").getTime() / 1000; Timestamp in seconds, remove '/1000' for milliseconds.
VBScript/ASP DateDiff("s", "01/01/1970 00:00:00", time field) More ASP
AutoIT _DateDiff('s', "1970/01/01 00:00:00", "YYYY/MM/DD HH:MM:SS")
Delphi Epoch := DateTimeToUnix(StrToDateTime(myString));
C Use the C Epoch Converter routines
R as.numeric(as.POSIXct("YYYY-MM-dd HH:mm:ss", tz = "GMT", origin="1970-01-01")) The origin parameter is optional
Go Example code
Rust SystemTime::now().duration_since(SystemTime::UNIX_EPOCH)
Adobe ColdFusion int(parseDateTime(datetime).getTime()/1000);
MySQL SELECT unix_timestamp(time) Time format: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS or YYMMDD or YYYYMMDD
More on using Epoch timestamps with MySQL
PostgreSQL SELECT extract(epoch FROM date('2000-01-01 12:34'));
With timestamp: SELECT EXTRACT(EPOCH FROM TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE '2018-02-16 20:38:40-08');
With interval: SELECT EXTRACT(EPOCH FROM INTERVAL '5 days 3 hours');
SQLite SELECT strftime('%s',timestring);
SQL Server SELECT DATEDIFF(s, '1970-01-01 00:00:00', time field)
JavaScript Use the JavaScript Date object
Unix/Linux Shell date +%s -d"Jan 1, 1980 00:00:01" Replace '-d' with '-ud' to input in GMT/UTC time.

Convert from epoch to human-readable date and timestamp

PHP date(output format, epoch); Output format example: 'r' = RFC 2822 date, more PHP examples
Python import time; time.strftime("%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S +0000", time.localtime(epoch)) Replace time.localtime with time.gmtime for GMT time. Or using datetime: import datetime; datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(epoch).replace(tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc)
Ruby Time.at(epoch)
C# private string epoch2string(int epoch) {
return new DateTime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, DateTimeKind.Utc).AddSeconds(epoch).ToShortDateString(); }
Perl Use the Perl Epoch routines
Java String date = new java.text.SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy HH:mm:ss").format(new java.util.Date (epoch*1000)); Epoch in seconds, remove '*1000' for milliseconds.
Lua datestring = os.date([format[,epoch]])
VBScript/ASP DateAdd("s", epoch, "01/01/1970 00:00:00") More ASP
AutoIT _DateAdd("s", $EpochSeconds , "1970/01/01 00:00:00")
Delphi myString := DateTimeToStr(UnixToDateTime(Epoch)); Where Epoch is a signed integer.
C Use the C Epoch Converter routines
Objective-C NSDate * myDate = [NSDate dateWithTimeIntervalSince1970:epoch]; NSLog(@"%@", date);
R as.POSIXct(epoch, origin="1970-01-01", tz="GMT")
Go Example code
Adobe ColdFusion DateAdd("s",epoch,"1/1/1970");
MySQL FROM_UNIXTIME(epoch, optional output format) Default output format is YYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS. If you need support for negative timestamps: DATE_FORMAT(DATE_ADD(FROM_UNIXTIME(0), interval -315619200 second),"%Y-%m-%d") (replace -315619200 with epoch) More MySQL
PostgreSQL PostgreSQL version 8.1 and higher: SELECT to_timestamp(epoch); Source Older versions: SELECT TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE 'epoch' + epoch * INTERVAL '1 second';
SQLite SELECT datetime(epoch_to_convert, 'unixepoch'); or local timezone: SELECT datetime(epoch_to_convert, 'unixepoch', 'localtime');
Oracle PL/SQL SELECT to_date('01-JAN-1970','dd-mon-yyyy')+(1526357743/60/60/24) from dual
Replace 1526357743 with epoch.
SQL Server DATEADD(s, epoch, '1970-01-01 00:00:00')
IBM Informix SELECT dbinfo('utc_to_datetime',epoch) FROM sysmaster:sysdual;
Microsoft Excel / LibreOffice Calc =(A1 / 86400) + 25569 Format the result cell for date/time, the result will be in GMT time (A1 is the cell with the epoch number). For other time zones: =((A1 +/- time zone adjustment) / 86400) + 25569.
Crystal Reports DateAdd("s", {EpochTimeStampField}-14400, #1/1/1970 00:00:00#) -14400 used for Eastern Standard Time. See Time Zones.
JavaScript Use the JavaScript Date object
Tcl/Tk clock format 1325376000 Documentation
MATLAB datestr(719529+TimeInSeconds/86400,'dd-mmm-yyyy HH:MM:SS')
IBM PureData System for Analytics select 996673954::int4::abstime::timestamp;
Unix/Linux Shell date -d @1520000000 Replace 1520000000 with your epoch, needs recent version of 'date'. Replace '-d' with '-ud' for GMT/UTC time.
Mac OS X date -j -r 1520000000
PowerShell Function get-epochDate ($epochDate) { [timezone]::CurrentTimeZone.ToLocalTime(([datetime]'1/1/1970').AddSeconds($epochDate)) }, then use: get-epochDate 1520000000. Works for Windows PowerShell v1 and v2
Other OS's Command line: perl -e "print scalar(localtime(epoch))" (If Perl is installed) Replace 'localtime' with 'gmtime' for GMT/UTC time.


Thanks to everyone who sent me corrections and updates!

More date related programming examples: What's the current week number? - What's the current day number?

Please note: All tools on this page are based on the date & time settings of your computer and use JavaScript to convert times. Some browsers use the current DST (Daylight Saving Time) rules for all dates in history. JavaScript does not support leap seconds.