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Days to Seconds Converter

Convert days to seconds and seconds to days instantly. Bidirectional time converter with formula and common values.

day

Seconds

43,200

s

0.5 day = 43,200 s

s = day × 86,400

Days to Seconds: 1 day equals 86400 s. To convert days to seconds, multiply by 86400 (s = day × 86,400). For example, 10 day = 864000 s.

How to Convert Days to Seconds

To convert from days to seconds, multiply the value by 86400. The conversion is linear, meaning doubling the input doubles the output.

Conversion Formula

  • Days to Seconds: s = day × 86,400
  • Seconds to Days: day = s ÷ 86,400

Days to Seconds Conversion Chart

Days (day)Seconds (s)
0.18640
0.2521600
0.543200
186400
2172800
3259200
5432000
10864000
201728000
252160000
504320000
1008640000
25021600000
100086400000

Understanding the Units

What is a Day?

A day equals 86,400 seconds; a non-SI unit accepted for use with SI.

What is a Second?

The second is the SI base unit of time, defined since 1967 by 9,192,631,770 cycles of radiation from a cesium-133 atom.

Common contexts: everywhere.

Related

FAQ

How many seconds are in a day?

One day contains exactly 86,400 seconds (24 hours x 60 minutes x 60 seconds).

How do I convert days to seconds?

Multiply the number of days by 86,400. For example, 3.5 days x 86,400 = 302,400 seconds.

Why are there 86,400 seconds in a day?

A day has 24 hours, each hour has 60 minutes, and each minute has 60 seconds. So 24 x 60 x 60 = 86,400.

How many seconds in half a day?

Half a day equals 43,200 seconds (86,400 / 2).

How many seconds are in 1 day?

1 day equals 86400 s.

How do you convert days to seconds?

Multiply the day value by 86400. Formula: s = day × 86,400.

How many seconds are in 5 days?

5 day = 432000 s.

How do you convert seconds back to days?

Use the inverse formula: day = s ÷ 86,400. For example, 1 s = 1.15741e-5 day.

What is the difference between Day and Second?

A day equals 86,400 seconds; a non-SI unit accepted for use with SI. The second is the SI base unit of time, defined since 1967 by 9,192,631,770 cycles of radiation from a cesium-133 atom.