Seamless Date and Unix Timestamp Conversion
For developers, system administrators, and data analysts, converting between human-readable dates and machine-friendly Unix timestamps is a common task. This tool provides a powerful and intuitive interface to handle these conversions effortlessly. Whether you have a date string or a timestamp in seconds or milliseconds, you can get the corresponding value in an instant.
How It Works
The tool is bidirectional. When you enter a date, it calculates the number of seconds/milliseconds that have elapsed since the Unix Epoch (January 1, 1970). Conversely, when you enter a timestamp, it adds that duration to the Epoch to calculate the corresponding human-readable date. It intelligently detects whether your timestamp is in seconds or milliseconds.
Key Features
- Two-Way Conversion: Convert from a date to a timestamp, or from a timestamp back to a date. The tool updates all fields in real-time.
- Timezone Support: Select from a comprehensive list of IANA timezones to ensure your date conversions are accurate for any location.
- Multiple Outputs: Get the timestamp in both seconds and milliseconds, and see the date in ISO 8601 format, UTC string, and as a relative time (e.g., "2 hours ago").
- Quick Action Buttons: Instantly set the date to "Now", the "Start of Day", or the "End of Day" with convenient buttons.
- Live Timestamp: A live-updating clock shows the current Unix timestamp in seconds.
How to Use the Converter
- To Convert a Date to a Timestamp:
Use the date and time pickers to select your desired date. Choose the correct timezone from the dropdown. The timestamp outputs will update automatically. - To Convert a Timestamp to a Date:
Enter a Unix timestamp (in seconds or milliseconds) into the timestamp input field. The date and time fields will update to show the corresponding date. - Copy Results:
Use the copy buttons next to each output field to easily copy the value you need.
Find Our Tool
Timestamp Converter, Date to Timestamp, Unix Time, Epoch Converter, Seconds to Date, Datetime to Unix.