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Unix Timestamp Converter: What Epoch Time Is and How Developers Use It

May 17, 20265 min readPublished by FluxToolkit Team

You're reading a server log and see 1716000000. You inspect a JWT token and find "exp": 1748000000. You're querying a database and see a column full of 10-digit integers. These are Unix timestamps — and every developer encounters them constantly.


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What is a Unix Timestamp?

A Unix timestamp (also called epoch time or POSIX time) is the number of seconds that have elapsed since January 1, 1970 at 00:00:00 UTC — a reference point called the "Unix epoch."

0           → January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 UTC
1000000000  → September 9, 2001, 01:46:40 UTC
1716000000  → May 18, 2024, 00:00:00 UTC
2000000000  → May 18, 2033, 03:33:20 UTC

The format is timezone-agnostic by definition — the timestamp represents the same moment in time globally, regardless of where you are.


Why Developers Use Timestamps Instead of Dates

Simplicity for calculations. The difference between two timestamps is exactly the number of seconds between them. No worrying about months with different numbers of days, daylight saving time, or timezone offsets. Sorting timestamps sorts chronologically.

Timezone neutrality. A date string like "2026-05-17 10:30" is ambiguous — which timezone? A timestamp like 1747474800 means the exact same moment everywhere.

Compact storage. A 32-bit or 64-bit integer is far more compact than a timestamp string. Databases store timestamps as integers natively for performance.

Universal support. Every programming language, operating system, and database has built-in functions to work with Unix timestamps.


Timestamps in Different Precisions

Unit Digits Example Common In
Seconds 10 digits 1716000000 Unix/Linux, most APIs
Milliseconds 13 digits 1716000000000 JavaScript, Java
Microseconds 16 digits 1716000000000000 Python, C/C++
Nanoseconds 19 digits 1716000000000000000 Go, Rust, high-precision systems

JavaScript's Date.now() returns milliseconds, so always divide by 1000 when comparing to a seconds-based Unix timestamp.


Working with Timestamps in Code

// JavaScript
const now = Math.floor(Date.now() / 1000);  // current Unix timestamp (seconds)
const date = new Date(timestamp * 1000);     // convert to Date object
const iso  = date.toISOString();             // "2026-05-17T10:30:00.000Z"
# Python
import time, datetime
now = int(time.time())                       # current Unix timestamp
dt  = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(now)   # convert to datetime
-- SQL (PostgreSQL)
SELECT to_timestamp(1716000000);             -- timestamp → datetime
SELECT extract(epoch from now())::int;       -- current Unix timestamp

The Year 2038 Problem

32-bit signed integers storing Unix timestamps will overflow at January 19, 2038, 03:14:07 UTC — exactly 2³¹ - 1 seconds after the epoch. After this point, systems using 32-bit timestamps will wrap to negative numbers and misinterpret dates.

Modern 64-bit systems can store timestamps until approximately year 292 billion — effectively unlimited. Most new systems use 64-bit integers. Legacy embedded systems and older 32-bit software remain vulnerable and require migration before 2038.


Where You'll Encounter Timestamps

  • JWT tokensiat (issued at) and exp (expiration) are Unix timestamps
  • Server logs — Apache, Nginx, and most web servers log in Unix time
  • Database recordscreated_at, updated_at columns are often stored as timestamps
  • APIs — Many REST APIs return timestamps in responses (GitHub, Stripe, Twilio)
  • Cookie expiration — HTTP cookies use Unix timestamps for Expires values
  • File systems — File modification times are stored as Unix timestamps

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does January 1, 1970 matter?

It's a historical convention from the early days of Unix development. The exact reason 1970 was chosen (rather than 1900 or 2000) was partly practical — it was recent enough to keep numbers small, distant enough to avoid edge cases. Today it's simply the universal standard.

How do I check if a timestamp is in seconds or milliseconds?

A 10-digit number is almost certainly seconds (current seconds are in the 17xxxxxxxx range). A 13-digit number is milliseconds. If a "second" timestamp gives you a date in 1970, you probably have milliseconds — divide by 1000.

Are Unix timestamps timezone-aware?

No — and that's the point. A Unix timestamp is always UTC. Converting to a local time for display is done by the client or application layer, never by the timestamp itself.

What is ISO 8601 and how does it differ?

ISO 8601 is a human-readable date/time format: 2026-05-17T10:30:00Z. Unix timestamps are integers. Both represent moments in time precisely; Unix timestamps are better for math, ISO 8601 is better for display and interchange.

Does FluxToolkit store my timestamp inputs?

No. All conversions run in your browser. Your inputs are never sent to our servers.


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