FAQ
It is Unix time in milliseconds since January 1, 1970 UTC, commonly produced by JavaScript Date.now().
Paste the 13-digit value and the converter returns local, UTC, ISO, and seconds outputs.
Yes. The converter shows seconds output so you can use APIs expecting 10-digit Unix time.
It is milliseconds. A 13-digit value like this is a Unix millisecond timestamp and is common in JavaScript and analytics payloads.
Date.now() to a readable date?
Paste the Date.now() result into the input box. The tool will render local time, UTC time, ISO 8601, and the equivalent Unix seconds value.
Related tools: Epoch to Date Converter, Epoch Converter, Batch Epoch Converter, Developer Resources
What Is a 13-Digit Timestamp?
A 13-digit timestamp is usually Unix time in milliseconds. You will often see it in JavaScript, browser events, frontend logs, analytics platforms, and client-side telemetry pipelines.