Time Converter + · Accurate time conversions for developers

22:04:04
Monday, February 9, 2026

Time in milliseconds: 1770671044000

Convert time effortlessly

Time Converter + brings together in one place the most frequently used converters: from microseconds to minutes, from dates to milliseconds and back, age calculations, differences between dates, and even a ready-to-use countdown timer.

The real-time clock above shows your current system time and timestamp. You can copy the milliseconds with one click and paste them directly into your logs, tests, or favorite tools.

Everything runs in your browser with no external dependencies. The interface is light, accessible, and focused on speed. Whether you work with JavaScript, Java, Python, or C#, you’ll save steps and avoid mistakes.

Why is time conversion so hard?

Time is deceptive. It seems simple until you have to deal with time zones, leap years, or the difference between UTC and GMT. Developers often struggle with:

  • Epoch consistency: Does the API return seconds or milliseconds?
  • Format confusion: Is it ISO 8601, RFC 2822, or a custom string?
  • Time zone math: Calculating offsets manually is a recipe for bugs.

Our tools are designed to handle these edge cases for you, providing clear, standard outputs every time.

Available tools

Milliseconds conversionsms ⇄ date / s / min
Seconds conversionss ⇄ ms / min / h
Minutes conversionsmin ⇄ s / h / d
Hours conversionsh ⇄ min / d
Days conversionsd ⇄ h / weeks
Month conversionsmonths ⇄ days (approx.)
Year conversionsyears ⇄ days
Date conversionsdate ⇄ ms
Age from datecalculate age
Duration between two datesinterval calculation
Countdown counterset a countdown

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Frequently Asked Questions

Unix Epoch time is the number of seconds (or milliseconds) that have elapsed since January 1, 1970, at 00:00:00 UTC. It is the standard way computers track time because it is independent of time zones.

It depends on the precision. A 10-digit timestamp usually represents seconds, while a 13-digit timestamp represents milliseconds. Always check the documentation, or try converting it to see if the date makes sense.

For most practical purposes, yes. GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) is a time zone, while UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is a time standard. They share the same current time, but UTC is used as the scientific precision reference.

This is usually a time zone issue. Timestamps are in UTC, but your browser or tool might display them in your local time zone. Always check if the output says "UTC" or "Local Time".

Why this homepage?

To give you context, quick access, and a reliable clock. No forms, no distractions: just enter, convert, and move on with your work. If you find it useful, bookmark the site.