Time

Time Converter

Time tracks duration based on the second as the SI unit

From Second
To Minute

s → min

0.0167 min

Time tracks duration based on the second as the SI unit. Minutes, hours, days, and weeks serve schedules, while milliseconds and microseconds cover electronics and physics; months here assume 30 days and years 365 days for quick estimates. Convert any interval for timing, logging, or simulation.

All unit results

Supported UnitsValue
Second s1
Millisecond ms1000
Microsecond µs1000000
Nanosecond ns1e+9
Minute min0.0167
Hour h0.0003
Day day0
Week wk0
Month (30 days) mo3.858e-7
Year (365 days) yr3.171e-8
Decade dec3.171e-9
Century c3.171e-10
Millennium kyr3.171e-11

How to Use

Enter the value and your starting unit, such as second or minute, and your desired target unit from the dropdown menus. The tool will instantly output the precise time conversion, along with a complete list of equivalent measurements. You can also quickly copy the value with or without units.

When to Use

Minutes, hours, days, and weeks serve schedules, while milliseconds and microseconds cover electronics and physics; months here assume 30 days and years 365 days for quick estimates. Convert any interval for timing, logging, or simulation.

Common Time Conversions

1 Second (s)=0.0167 Minute (min)
1 Second (s)=1000 Millisecond (ms)
1 Microsecond (µs)=1000 Nanosecond (ns)
1 Minute (min)=0.0167 Hour (h)

Supported Units

s Second
ms Millisecond
µs Microsecond
ns Nanosecond
min Minute
h Hour
day Day
wk Week
mo Month (30 days)
yr Year (365 days)
dec Decade
c Century
kyr Millennium

Common Questions

What is the Time converter used for?

Time tracks duration based on the second as the SI unit. Minutes, hours, days, and weeks serve schedules, while milliseconds and microseconds cover electronics and physics; months here assume 30 days and years 365 days for quick estimates. Convert any interval for timing, logging, or simulation.

What is the exact difference between a millisecond and a microsecond?

A millisecond (ms) is one-thousandth of a second. A microsecond (μs) is one-millionth of a second. There are exactly 1,000 microseconds in a single millisecond.

Why do some calendar calculations assume a 365.2425-day year?

While a standard calendar year is 365 days, the Earth takes approximately 365.2425 days to orbit the sun. The Gregorian calendar accounts for this drift by adding a leap day every 4 years, skipping it on century years unless divisible by 400.