Time Converter

Convert time instantly. Simple, fast, and accurate for your schedule.

Tool Icon Time Converter

Time Categories:
Common Time Conversions:
1 minute =
60 seconds
1 hour =
60 minutes
1 day =
24 hours
1 week =
7 days
Time Breakdown:
Unit Value
Day 1.0
Hour 24.0
Minute 1440.0
Second 86400.0
Millisecond 86400000.0
Microsecond 86400000000.0
Nanosecond 86400000000000.0

About This Tool

So, you need to convert time. Maybe you're dealing with time zones, or you’ve got a timestamp in UTC and your brain only speaks local time. Or maybe you're just trying to figure out how many seconds are left until your coffee break. Whatever the reason, this time converter is here to help—no fluff, no nonsense. It’s not fancy. It doesn’t have animations or a login screen. You just pick your starting format, plug in the numbers, and get the result in whatever format you want. That’s it. Simple, fast, and actually useful when you’re in a hurry.

Key Features

  • Convert between 12-hour and 24-hour time formats—no more squinting at "3 PM" and guessing if it’s 03:00 or 15:00.
  • Switch time zones with a dropdown. Pick your current zone, pick your target, and bam—adjusted time.
  • Convert timestamps (like Unix time) to readable dates and times. Great for debugging logs or parsing API responses.
  • Calculate time differences. How long between 9:15 AM and 2:45 PM? It’ll tell you in hours, minutes, or total seconds.
  • Works offline. No data sent anywhere. Your time stays yours.
  • Mobile-friendly. Use it on your phone while you’re waiting in line or pretending to listen in a meeting.

FAQ

Does it handle daylight saving time?

Yeah, it does. As long as you pick the right time zone, it’ll account for DST changes automatically. So if you're converting from New York to London in March, it won’t trip over the clock shift.

Can I use this for historical dates?

Sure, but keep in mind that time zone rules have changed over the years. The tool uses current rules, so very old dates might be off by an hour or so. For anything before the 1970s, double-check with a historian or just accept the slight fudge.