Date Calculator

Our free date calculator helps you find the exact duration between any two dates, add or subtract days/weeks/months/years from a date, and calculate business days excluding weekends and holidays. Perfect for project planning, deadline tracking, event countdown, and date-related calculations.

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Include end date in count
Total Duration
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days between dates
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Years
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Months
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Days

Work Days Breakdown

Business Days
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Weekend Days
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Total Weeks 0

lightbulb Tips

  • Business days = Mon-Fri only
  • Toggle to include/exclude end date
  • Use negative numbers to subtract
  • 1 year ≈ 365 days (366 in leap year)

calendar_month Quick Reference

1 week 7 days
1 month (avg) 30.44 days
1 year 365 days
Leap year 366 days
Work days/year ~260 days

How to Use This Calculator

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Select Start Date

Choose the first date for your calculation using the day, month, and year dropdowns.

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Select End Date

Choose the second date. The calculator finds the difference between these dates.

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View Results

See days, weeks, months, years between dates plus business days excluding weekends.

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Add/Subtract Days

Optionally add or subtract days from the start date to find a future or past date.

The Formula

Date difference is calculated by finding the number of days between two dates, then converting to years, months, weeks as needed. Business days exclude Saturdays and Sundays from the count.

Days = End Date - Start Date

lightbulb Variables Explained

  • Days Number of days between dates
  • End Date The later date
  • Start Date The earlier date

tips_and_updates Pro Tips

1

Business days typically exclude Saturdays and Sundays

2

Remember to account for holidays when calculating work days

3

Leap years have 366 days — February has 29 days

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A standard year has 52 weeks and 1 day (or 2 days in leap years)

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Weeks between dates can be calculated by dividing days by 7

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For project planning, always add buffer days to your estimates

Date arithmetic seems trivial until edge cases appear: leap years, month-length drift, business days vs calendar days, public holidays that vary by country and state, and jurisdiction-specific legal day-counting. This calculator handles the math — any two dates, any add/subtract span, weekday-only or full calendar counting — and the sections below cover the context: how to count business days across the US, UK, Canada and Australia, how to read legal-deadline rules that aren't what they appear, and why ISO 8601 is the only safe date format for international work.

Calculating Days Between Two Dates

The core operation: end_date − start_date, expressed in days. Our calculator handles the calendar math so you don't have to worry about month lengths or leap years. Example: January 1, 2026 to December 31, 2026 is 364 days (2026 isn't a leap year). January 1, 2024 to December 31, 2024 is 365 days (leap year). You can choose to include or exclude the end date — 'inclusive' counts both endpoints (e.g., Jan 1 to Jan 3 inclusive = 3 days); 'exclusive' counts only the gap (= 2 days). Legal and billing contracts often specify one mode — read carefully.

Adding or Subtracting Days, Weeks, Months, Years

Enter a starting date and a signed offset to find the resulting date. Adding days is simple (Jan 15 + 10 days = Jan 25). Adding months is where it gets interesting — month-end handling differs by convention. January 31 + 1 month typically rolls to February 28/29 (clamped to last day of target month). Our calculator clamps by default. For financial contracts, verify the convention (EOM vs simple month-add). Adding years is similar — Feb 29 + 1 year lands on Feb 28 in non-leap years. Our calculator also handles negative offsets ('X days ago'), useful for back-calculating milestones.

Calendar Days vs Business Days

Calendar days include weekends and holidays — every day on the calendar counts. Business days (also called working days or weekdays) exclude Saturday and Sunday. The distinction matters for delivery estimates, court filings, and payroll. Example: a contract saying 'ship within 5 days' might mean 5 calendar days (Monday-Friday delivery of a Friday order is OK) or 5 business days (would mean next Friday for a Friday order). If unclear, ask in writing before agreeing. Our calculator shows both side-by-side, so you can pick the one that matches the rule you're working against.

Public Holidays in the US, UK, Canada and Australia

Counting 'working days' usually also requires subtracting public holidays. United States: 11 federal holidays — New Year's Day, MLK Day, Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Juneteenth, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas. States add their own (e.g., California's Cesar Chavez Day). United Kingdom: 8 bank holidays in England and Wales (plus St Andrew's Day in Scotland, St Patrick's Day and Boxing Day variations in Northern Ireland). Scotland has 9 days; Northern Ireland 10. Canada: 5 federal statutory (New Year's, Good Friday, Canada Day, Labour Day, Christmas) plus provincial holidays that can add 4-6 more. Ontario has 9 statutory holidays; BC has 10. Australia: 7 national (New Year's, Australia Day, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Anzac Day, Christmas, Boxing Day) plus state-specific (Melbourne Cup in Victoria, Queen's Birthday on different dates by state).

Date Arithmetic Across Leap Years

A leap year has 366 days — February gets a 29th day. The rule: years divisible by 4 are leap, except century years (1900, 2100) that aren't divisible by 400. So 1900 wasn't leap, 2000 was, 2100 won't be. Between 2026-01-01 and 2030-12-31 there's exactly one leap year (2028), giving 1,826 days. Our calculator handles this automatically. Edge cases to watch: contracts that specify 'one year' when crossing a leap boundary (Feb 28, 2027 + 1 year = Feb 28, 2028 or Feb 29, 2028?); birthday anniversaries for Feb 29-born people; interest accrual in 365 vs 366 year conventions.

Weeks, Months and Years Between Dates

Beyond days, the calculator shows the duration in weeks (days ÷ 7), months (calendar-month counting), and years (complete years plus remaining days). Month counting is not uniform: 'six months' can mean 180 days, or calendar-month counting (Jan 15 + 6 months = Jul 15), or banking-month conventions (30 days × 6). Our calculator uses calendar-month counting by default — Apr 24, 2026 to Oct 24, 2026 = 6 complete months, 0 days. If the end date doesn't match the start day (say, Apr 24 to Oct 20), it's 5 months 26 days. Always clarify which convention applies to contracts, billing cycles, or subscription renewals.

Due Dates, Countdown, and Deadline Planning

For deadline planning, use the calculator in two modes. Countdown mode: enter a target date, see days remaining from today (or any start date). Useful for event planning, project deadlines, school finals. Duration mode: enter start and end, see total span — useful for sprint planning, grant periods, contract terms. For project planning, also add business-day counting: a 30-calendar-day project that starts Friday and must finish by month-end loses ~8 weekend days to execution. Over quarter-long projects, holiday density varies — Q4 loses 5-7 working days in the US to Thanksgiving + Christmas; Q1 loses 3-5 to MLK + Presidents Day. Plan accordingly.

ISO 8601 and International Date Formatting

Date format is the silent source of international business errors. '04/05/2026' means April 5 in the US but May 4 in UK, Canada, Australia and most of the world. The safe option is ISO 8601: YYYY-MM-DD — unambiguous, sorts chronologically as text, and is the international standard used across programming, databases and APIs. Examples: 2026-04-24 is always 24 April 2026. For human-readable communication across locales, spell the month: '24 April 2026' or 'April 24, 2026'. US colloquial usage prefers MM/DD; UK, Canada, Australia prefer DD/MM. When exporting or sharing date data, default to ISO 8601 unless a human requester specifies otherwise.

Fiscal Years, Quarters and Anniversary Dates

Fiscal years aren't always calendar years. US federal fiscal year runs October 1 to September 30. UK government fiscal year is April 6 to April 5 (individual tax) or April 1 to March 31 (corporate). Canadian federal fiscal year is April 1 to March 31. Australian fiscal year is July 1 to June 30. Many corporations choose their own (Apple's fiscal year ends in late September). Quarters: calendar quarters are Jan-Mar, Apr-Jun, Jul-Sep, Oct-Dec. Fiscal quarters shift based on fiscal year start. For contract anniversaries, work out complete years first, then remaining months/days — our calculator shows this automatically.

Common Date Calculation Mistakes

Off-by-one from inclusive/exclusive confusion. 'From Jan 1 to Jan 3' can be 2 or 3 days depending on whether both endpoints count. Forgetting leap days. 2024 and 2028 have 366 days each. Misreading the date format. 04/05 is Apr 5 (US) or May 4 (elsewhere). Mixing business days and calendar days. '14 days' in an HR policy vs a contract may mean different things. Ignoring holidays when counting business days. Our simple weekday-exclude mode doesn't know federal/provincial/state holidays. Assuming month-add preserves day. Jan 31 + 1 month is Feb 28/29, not Feb 31. For financial contracts, verify the month-add convention (EOM rolls to last day; CALENDAR clamps to last valid day). Timezone drift at day boundaries. Adding '1 day' to 2026-04-24T23:00 UTC in Sydney local time might land on 26th not 25th.

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