Wondering what date is 30, 60, or 90 days from today? This days from today calculator adds (or subtracts) any number of days to the current date and returns the exact result — including the day of the week and the ISO week number — so you can pin down payment deadlines, probation periods, medication refills, visa windows, and return-policy cutoffs in seconds.
Switch to business-day mode to skip Saturdays and Sundays, which is how most invoice terms, shipping estimates, and HR deadlines are actually counted. The reference table below the result recalculates the most-searched spans — 7 through 180 days — from today, every day.
How Days From Today Are Counted
Calendar-day counting starts from today and advances one day at a time, so tomorrow is 1 day from today and today itself is day zero. Because a week is exactly 7 days, any multiple of 7 — 7, 14, 21, 28 days — always lands on the same weekday as today. That is a quick sanity check for any date math.
Business-day counting advances only over Mondays through Fridays: if today is Thursday, 3 business days from today is Tuesday, because Saturday and Sunday are skipped. Ten business days therefore always spans exactly two calendar weeks, and 90 business days stretches to roughly 126 calendar days. This calculator does not skip public holidays, since they vary by country and industry — add one calendar day for each holiday inside your span.
Common Spans and What They Roughly Equal
The table above computes these dynamically from today's date; here is how the popular spans relate to weeks and months:
- 7, 14, 21, 28 days — exactly 1, 2, 3, and 4 weeks; always the same weekday as today
- 30 days — about 1 month; a common invoice (net-30) and apartment-notice period
- 45 days — 6 weeks and 3 days; common escrow and rebate window
- 60 days — about 2 months (net-60 terms, many visa deadlines)
- 90 days — about 3 months, or 12 weeks and 6 days; the classic probation period and quarterly horizon
- 120 days — about 4 months
- 180 days — about 6 months (26 weeks even would be 182 days)
Because months vary from 28 to 31 days, "90 days" and "3 months" can differ by up to 3 days — contracts usually specify which one governs.
Example: Counting 90 Days From Today
Say today is Tuesday, July 14. Adding 90 calendar days: 17 days finish July (through July 31), 31 more cover August (day 48), and 30 cover September (day 78), leaving 12 days into October — October 12. Since 90 = 12 weeks + 6 days, the result lands one weekday before Tuesday: a Monday.
Now count 90 business days instead. Business days accrue 5 per week, so 90 business days is 18 full weeks — 126 calendar days — landing around November 17. That 36-day gap is why it is critical to check whether a deadline says "days" or "business days". Enter your own number above and the calculator handles both counts, including any weekend adjustments, automatically.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is 90 days from today?
It is the calendar date exactly 90 days ahead — roughly 3 months, or 12 weeks and 6 days, so it lands one weekday earlier in the week than today. Enter 90 above for the exact date, weekday, and week number; the common-dates table also shows it recalculated for today automatically.
How are business days counted?
Business days are Mondays through Fridays; Saturdays and Sundays are skipped. Counting starts with the next qualifying day, so 1 business day from Friday is Monday. Standard counts exclude public holidays too, but holidays vary by country and company, so this calculator leaves them in — add one day per holiday in your span.
What is 30 days from today — is that the same as one month?
Not always. Thirty days from today equals "one month" only when the current month has 30 days. From a date in January (31 days) it lands a day early; from late January it can spill past February entirely. Contracts and return policies usually mean exactly 30 calendar days unless they say "one month".
Can I calculate days before today?
Yes — enter a negative number. For example, −90 returns the date 90 days ago, which is handy for lookback periods like 90-day medication histories, insurance eligibility windows, or checking whether a purchase is still inside a return window.
What is 180 days from today?
It is the date about 6 months ahead — 25 weeks and 5 days, so it lands two weekdays earlier in the week than today. The 180-day span is common for passport validity rules (many countries require 6 months of validity), immigration stay limits, and semi-annual reviews. The table above shows the exact date.