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Enter a Timestamp
Supports Unix timestamps in seconds, milliseconds, microseconds and nanoseconds.
1731198887
Seconds since Jan 01 1970. (UTC)
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Date
11/10/2024 @ 12:34am UTC
2024-11-10T00:34:47+00:00 ISO 8601
Sun, 10 Nov 2024 00:34:47 +0000 RFC 822, 1036, 1123, 2822
Sunday, 10-Nov-24 00:34:47 UTC RFC 2822
2024-11-10T00:34:47+00:00 RFC 3339

What is the unix time stamp?

The unix time stamp is a way to track time as a running total of seconds. This count starts at the Unix Epoch on January 1st, 1970 at UTC. Therefore, the unix time stamp is merely the number of seconds between a particular date and the Unix Epoch. It should also be pointed out (thanks to the comments from visitors to this site) that this point in time technically does not change no matter where you are located on the globe. This is very useful to computer systems for tracking and sorting dated information in dynamic and distributed applications both online and client side.

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

What happens on January 19, 2038?

On this date the Unix Time Stamp will cease to work due to a 32-bit overflow. Before this moment millions of applications will need to either adopt a new convention for time stamps or be migrated to 64-bit systems which will buy the time stamp a "bit" more time.