Free online tool
Timestamp Converter
Convert Unix timestamps to readable dates and dates back to timestamps.
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About the Timestamp Converter
Debug logs, APIs, analytics exports, and database fields by converting timestamps into local readable time.
Convert timestamps while debugging
Unix timestamps appear in APIs, logs, databases, analytics exports, and developer tools. Converting them to readable dates makes troubleshooting faster.
This converter helps you compare event times, understand API values, and document technical data in a human-readable format.
Complete guide to using the Timestamp Converter
The Timestamp Converter is designed for converting timestamps into readable dates. Instead of installing heavy software or switching between multiple websites, you can complete the task directly in your browser and keep moving through your workflow.
A good Unix timestamp converter page should do more than produce a quick result. It should explain when the tool is useful, how to prepare the input, what the output means, and what to check before using that output in real work. That is why this TechHowly page combines the working tool with practical guidance, examples, mistakes to avoid, and related utilities.
This converter helps you compare event times, understand API values, and document technical data in a human-readable format.
For best results, treat the output as a helpful starting point and apply your own review before publishing, sharing, or using it in an important project. This approach keeps the tool fast while still supporting careful, high-quality work.
Use cases
- Read timestamps from logs.
- Convert API dates while debugging.
- Compare event times across systems.
Examples
Tips for better results
- Check whether your source uses seconds or milliseconds.
- Remember that displayed time can depend on timezone.
- Use ISO output when sharing exact technical timestamps.
For critical reports, verify timezone assumptions before making decisions from timestamp data.
Recommended workflow
- Enter a Unix timestamp or choose a date and time.
- Check both readable and ISO date outputs.
- Confirm whether your source uses seconds or milliseconds.
- Compare timezones when sharing results with others.
- Copy the format that matches your report or debug note.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Confusing seconds with milliseconds.
- Ignoring timezone differences.
- Copying local time when UTC is required.
- Using timestamps without checking the source system.
- Making business decisions from unverified time data.
Who this tool helps
How to use it
- Enter a Unix timestamp or choose a date.
- Convert in either direction.
- Use the output for debugging or documentation.
Related tools
Frequently asked questions
What is a Unix timestamp?
It is the number of seconds since January 1, 1970 UTC.
Does timezone matter?
Yes. The readable display uses your browser timezone unless noted.