Convert minutes to hours, seconds, days, weeks, months, and years with bidirectional multi-unit support and quick conversion table.
This converter handles minute-based durations and translates them into hours, seconds, days, weeks, months, and years. Minutes are the unit people use most for meetings, workouts, cooking, travel estimates, and class periods, so they often need to be converted quickly without losing context. A 20-minute commute, a 45-minute class, or a 90-minute appointment all make more sense when the same value can be viewed in more than one way.
The page is useful for both short and medium durations. It can turn 45 minutes into a decimal hour for billing, 90 minutes into a cleaner hour-and-minute view, or 10,080 minutes into the exact length of a week. That makes it useful for everyday scheduling as well as for larger planning tasks where you want to compare totals across several time units.
Use it when a duration starts in minutes but needs to be reported in a more convenient time scale. The output keeps the minute total visible while showing the larger units side by side.
Minutes are the natural unit for short scheduling and tracking, but many workflows need those values restated in hours, days, or decimal hours. This page keeps those relationships in one place for quick planning and reporting, and it makes it easier to compare a short session with a larger schedule or billing block.
1 minute = 60 seconds = 60,000 milliseconds. 1 hour = 60 minutes. 1 day = 1,440 minutes. 1 week = 10,080 minutes. 1 month ≈ 43,830 min. 1 year ≈ 525,960 min.
Result: 90 min = 1.5 hours = 5,400 seconds = 0.0625 days
Ninety minutes converts to 1.5 hours, 5,400 seconds, and roughly 1/16 of a day.
Minutes govern modern schedules: meetings run 30-60 minutes, commutes average 26 minutes (US), workout sessions last 30-90 minutes, and meal preparation takes 15-60 minutes. Converting between minutes and hours is one of the most common daily calculations.
Legal and consulting professionals bill in minimum increments — commonly 6 minutes (0.1 hour) or 15 minutes (0.25 hour). Accurate conversion between these increments and total hours or days is essential for invoicing.
In physics, minutes are rarely used directly (seconds are the SI standard), but in practical engineering — reaction times, process cycles, and production rates — minutes provide a convenient middle ground between seconds and hours.
There are exactly 1,440 minutes in a day because 24 hours times 60 minutes equals 1,440. That number is the base reference for most of the other conversions on the page.
An average year has approximately 525,960 minutes. That comes from 365.25 days times 24 hours times 60 minutes, so it is the leap-aware average rather than a single calendar year.
Divide by 60: the quotient is hours and the remainder is minutes. For example, 145 minutes becomes 2 hours and 25 minutes, which is easier to read than a decimal hour in many situations.
A week has exactly 10,080 minutes because 7 days times 24 hours times 60 minutes equals 10,080. That makes weeks a useful benchmark for planning and time tracking.
A decimal minute expresses fractional minutes as decimals rather than seconds. For example, 5 minutes 30 seconds becomes 5.5 decimal minutes, which is handy when a system expects a single numeric value.
Divide the minutes by 60. For example, 45 minutes equals 0.75 hours, while 20 minutes is about 0.333 hours, so the result is just a direct ratio.