Convert months to years, days, weeks, and hours with natural years-and-months breakdown, presets for common terms, and a comprehensive table.
This converter turns month counts into years by dividing by 12. It is useful for loan terms, subscriptions, child ages, and planning horizons that are usually written in months but read more naturally in years. A 6-month stretch, an 18-month contract, or a 60-month loan can all be restated in a form that is easier to compare against other annual values.
The page shows both the decimal year value and a years-and-months breakdown, plus related days, weeks, and hours using an average month length. That lets you keep the monthly assumption visible while still seeing the result in the annual format many reports and contracts prefer. It is especially helpful when a month count is close to a whole number of years but not exactly there.
Use it when a month-based duration needs to be restated in years without losing the leftover months. The extra breakdown makes the result easier to explain to someone reading the number for the first time.
Month-based terms show up constantly in finance, contracts, and child development, but years are easier to compare. This page keeps both views visible so the duration is easier to communicate and audit, and it makes the leftover months visible instead of hiding them inside a decimal. That is useful when the month count is close to a whole year and the remainder matters.
Years = Months ÷ 12. Days = Months × 30.4375 (avg). Weeks = Days ÷ 7. Hours = Days × 24.
Result: 18 months = 1.5 years = 1 year 6 months ≈ 548 days
Dividing 18 by 12 gives exactly 1.5 years, or 1 year and 6 months.
Auto loans commonly come in 36, 48, 60, and 72-month terms. Mortgages use 180 (15-year) or 360 (30-year) months. CDs offer 6, 12, 18, 24, and 60-month terms. Converting to years helps compare products across different term structures.
Pediatricians track infant development in months up to age 2-3. "18 months" is more precise than "1.5 years" for developmental milestones. After age 3, years become the standard measure.
Monthly subscription costs compound over time. A $15/month service costs $180/year (12 months) or $900 over 5 years (60 months). Converting month counts to years helps visualize long-term costs.
18 months equals 1.5 years. In breakdown form, that is 1 year and 6 months, which is why it is such a common example term.
36 months equals exactly 3 years. That is a standard benchmark for loans, contracts, and subscription comparisons, so it is often used as a clean round term.
60 months equals exactly 5 years. It is a common auto loan term and an easy one to compare against annual pricing.
There are 12 months in a year. Each month has between 28 and 31 days, which is why this converter keeps the month count separate from day-based estimates.
Divide months by 12 to get years. If you want days as well, multiply the remaining month fraction by 30.4375 so the result follows the average-month convention.
Yes, 24 months equals exactly 2 years. Phone contracts and many warranties use 24-month terms, which makes this a very common comparison point.