Convert days to hours, minutes, seconds, weeks, months, and years with preset examples, breakdown display, and reference duration tables.
This converter turns day counts into the other time units people actually use: hours, minutes, seconds, weeks, months, and years. It is useful for schedules, deadlines, retention periods, travel durations, and any timeline that starts in days but needs to be expressed another way. If a task is due in 12 days, a report spans 90 days, or a policy lasts 365 days, the page gives the same duration in several forms so you can pick the one that fits the context.
Days are easy when you stay inside hours or weeks, but months and years need an average-calendar assumption. This page uses standard average values so longer conversions stay consistent while still giving a readable breakdown. That is especially helpful when you need a planning estimate instead of a literal calendar date, because months vary in length and years can include leap days.
Use it when you want both the exact unit math and a more natural description of the same duration. The table and breakdown help convert one-off values, compare multiple durations, or sanity-check a timeline before you share it.
Days sit in the middle of most real schedules. This page helps when a duration in days needs to become weeks for planning, hours for operations, or months and years for reporting and communication. It keeps the average-calendar assumption visible so the result is easier to explain, and it gives you the same span in several units so you can choose the one that fits the audience.
Day Conversion: 1 day = 24 hours = 1,440 minutes = 86,400 seconds = 86,400,000 milliseconds. 1 week = 7 days. 1 month (average) = 30.4375 days. 1 year (average) = 365.25 days.
Result: 90 days ≈ 2,160 hours ≈ 12.857 weeks ≈ 2.957 months ≈ 0.2464 years
Converting 90 days shows equivalent durations across all time units, with a breakdown of approximately 2 months, 4 weeks, and 1 day.
Time conversions are fundamental to science, engineering, project management, and daily life. While the base relationships are simple (60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour, 24 hours in a day), things become less intuitive at larger scales where months and years have varying lengths.
A solar day (24 hours) is the standard for civil timekeeping. However, a sidereal day (Earth's rotation relative to distant stars) is about 23 hours, 56 minutes. For most practical purposes, 1 day = exactly 24 hours = 1,440 minutes = 86,400 seconds.
Project managers convert between days and weeks for sprint planning. Scientists use seconds for calculations but report results in days or years. Pharmacists calculate dosing intervals in hours. Astronomers measure in days for orbital periods. This converter handles all these use cases with consistent, accurate results.
There are exactly 24 hours in one day. That comes from the standard civil day used in everyday scheduling, not from a special conversion rule.
A common year has 365 days, but a leap year has 366 days. For conversion purposes, the average year length is 365.25 days, which keeps long-running calculations consistent.
Divide the number of days by 30.4375, which is the average number of days per month over a full year. For example, 90 days ÷ 30.4375 is approximately 2.96 months, so the result is a planning estimate rather than a literal calendar month count.
365.25 days per year divided by 12 months equals 30.4375 days per month. That average accounts for months having 28, 29, 30, or 31 days, so it is the most balanced general-purpose factor.
Divide total days by 7 to get weeks, then use the remainder for leftover days. For example, 23 days equals 3 weeks and 2 days, which is a convenient way to show both the larger span and the leftover portion.
There are 86,400 seconds in one day. The count comes from 24 hours multiplied by 60 minutes and then by 60 seconds.