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How to convert date to timestamp in PHP?

How do I get timestamp from e.g. 22-09-2008?


P
Prof. Falken

This method works on both Windows and Unix and is time-zone aware, which is probably what you want if you work with dates.

If you don't care about timezone, or want to use the time zone your server uses:

$d = DateTime::createFromFormat('d-m-Y H:i:s', '22-09-2008 00:00:00');
if ($d === false) {
    die("Incorrect date string");
} else {
    echo $d->getTimestamp();
}

1222093324 (This will differ depending on your server time zone...)

If you want to specify in which time zone, here EST. (Same as New York.)

$d = DateTime::createFromFormat(
    'd-m-Y H:i:s',
    '22-09-2008 00:00:00',
    new DateTimeZone('EST')
);

if ($d === false) {
    die("Incorrect date string");
} else {
    echo $d->getTimestamp();
}

1222093305

Or if you want to use UTC. (Same as "GMT".)

$d = DateTime::createFromFormat(
    'd-m-Y H:i:s',
    '22-09-2008 00:00:00',
    new DateTimeZone('UTC')
);

if ($d === false) {
    die("Incorrect date string");
} else {
    echo $d->getTimestamp();
}

1222093289

Regardless, it's always a good starting point to be strict when parsing strings into structured data. It can save awkward debugging in the future. Therefore I recommend to always specify date format.


Elegant. I had forgotten about that!
How is it that you have not gotten the credit for this answer yet?!
A completely valid answer, but I'm surprised that Armin Ronacher's answer hasn't matched it in upvotes -- ambiguity is ALWAYS bad.
@Devner Well, it seems, on my server, that format isn't supported. Maybe it's different with yours.
@LucaFagioli It seems Prof.Falken, desperate to see that answer with so many upvotes, updated it and included his own science.
P
Prof. Falken

There is also strptime() which expects exactly one format:

$a = strptime('22-09-2008', '%d-%m-%Y');
$timestamp = mktime(0, 0, 0, $a['tm_mon']+1, $a['tm_mday'], $a['tm_year']+1900);

it should be tm_mon instead of tm_month and tm_mday instead of tm_day
Beware, strptime function is not available on Windows.
Those on Windows and PHP 5.3.0+, consider using date_parse_from_format instead of strptime.
... because strptime is not implemented in Windows platforms.
Also, since PHP 5.3 php.net/manual/en/function.date-parse-from-format.php is recommended instead.
G
Gordon

With DateTime API:

$dateTime = new DateTime('2008-09-22'); 
echo $dateTime->format('U'); 

// or 

$date = new DateTime('2008-09-22');
echo $date->getTimestamp();

The same with the procedural API:

$date = date_create('2008-09-22');
echo date_format($date, 'U');

// or

$date = date_create('2008-09-22');
echo date_timestamp_get($date);

If the above fails because you are using a unsupported format, you can use

$date = DateTime::createFromFormat('!d-m-Y', '22-09-2008');
echo $dateTime->format('U'); 

// or

$date = date_parse_from_format('!d-m-Y', '22-09-2008');
echo date_format($date, 'U');

Note that if you do not set the !, the time portion will be set to current time, which is different from the first four which will use midnight when you omit the time.

Yet another alternative is to use the IntlDateFormatter API:

$formatter = new IntlDateFormatter(
    'en_US',
    IntlDateFormatter::FULL,
    IntlDateFormatter::FULL,
    'GMT',
    IntlDateFormatter::GREGORIAN,
    'dd-MM-yyyy'
);
echo $formatter->parse('22-09-2008');

Unless you are working with localized date strings, the easier choice is likely DateTime.


I'd recommend this over my answer nowadays.
Arggg. ! Don't forget the ! My date based timestamp was changing on each refresh and driving me mad - because DateTime was helpfully adding the current time without asking or being told. Grrr.
I want to add that I recommend against ambiguous date parsing, and that the date format should be given explicitly when parsing date strings.
C
Community

Be careful with functions like strtotime() that try to "guess" what you mean (it doesn't guess of course, the rules are here).

Indeed 22-09-2008 will be parsed as 22 September 2008, as it is the only reasonable thing.

How will 08-09-2008 be parsed? Probably 09 August 2008.

What about 2008-09-50? Some versions of PHP parse this as 20 October 2008.

So, if you are sure your input is in DD-MM-YYYY format, it's better to use the solution offered by @Armin Ronacher.


Valid concern. I guess strtotime() relies in your locale.
Note: on most non-english speaking countries, the format is dd-mm-yyyy, not mm-dd-yyyy.
@CamiloMartin Most non-english spoken countries use the first format you stated but the DB usually store the date in YYYY-mm-dd The conversion happens only to display to the users
@DannyG just looked at the docs and it seems you're right if by DB you mean MySQL. But it does seem ridiculous to do this...
P
Prof. Falken

This method works on both Windows and Unix and is time-zone aware, which is probably what you want if you work with dates.

If you don't care about timezone, or want to use the time zone your server uses:

$d = DateTime::createFromFormat('d-m-Y H:i:s', '22-09-2008 00:00:00');
if ($d === false) {
    die("Incorrect date string");
} else {
    echo $d->getTimestamp();
}

1222093324 (This will differ depending on your server time zone...)

If you want to specify in which time zone, here EST. (Same as New York.)

$d = DateTime::createFromFormat(
    'd-m-Y H:i:s',
    '22-09-2008 00:00:00',
    new DateTimeZone('EST')
);

if ($d === false) {
    die("Incorrect date string");
} else {
    echo $d->getTimestamp();
}

1222093305

Or if you want to use UTC. (Same as "GMT".)

$d = DateTime::createFromFormat(
    'd-m-Y H:i:s',
    '22-09-2008 00:00:00',
    new DateTimeZone('UTC')
);

if ($d === false) {
    die("Incorrect date string");
} else {
    echo $d->getTimestamp();
}

1222093289

Regardless, it's always a good starting point to be strict when parsing strings into structured data. It can save awkward debugging in the future. Therefore I recommend to always specify date format.


Hey Falken, you are welcome. However it is probably better specifying that this solution applies to PHP 5.3+
T
Till

Using mktime:

list($day, $month, $year) = explode('-', '22-09-2008');
echo mktime(0, 0, 0, $month, $day, $year);

That's what I've always done. Explode it on - or / or . or whatever it's separated on, then mktime.
There is a note in the PHP manual for the last parameter of the mktime function: "As of PHP 5.1.0, this parameter became deprecated. As a result, the new timezone handling features should be used instead." I've yet to discover what the new features are that they speak about though, as they haven't linked to it!
This is far better than strtotime() For some reason strtotime() doesn't work on certain dates, and is therefore very unreliable.
k
klit67

Using strtotime() function you can easily convert date to timestamp

<?php
// set default timezone
date_default_timezone_set('America/Los_Angeles');

//define date and time
$date = date("d M Y H:i:s");

// output
echo strtotime($date);
?> 

More info: http://php.net/manual/en/function.strtotime.php

Online conversion tool: http://freeonlinetools24.com/


To future readers - strtotime() was an accident and it's use should not be encouraged. It's ambiguous, because it tries to guess at the date format. Even if you use it correctly, it makes your code harder to understand and reason about and you run the risk of a change being made to your code base which will introduce errors, because no matter what you give to strtotime(), it will make it's best to guess. That guess may be incorrect, but you will get no indication it guessed incorrectly. It's a footgun. Use it if you like, but novice users can use a caveat I think. Caution: footgun ahead
P
Peter Mortensen

Here is a very simple and effective solution using the split and mtime functions:

$date="30/07/2010 13:24"; //Date example
list($day, $month, $year, $hour, $minute) = split('[/ :]', $date); 

//The variables should be arranged according to your date format and so the separators
$timestamp = mktime($hour, $minute, 0, $month, $day, $year);
echo date("r", $timestamp);

It worked like a charm for me.


Note that split() is now deprecated, but if you're using an ol' php version, it's working great!
V
Victor

Given that the function strptime() does not work for Windows and strtotime() can return unexpected results, I recommend using date_parse_from_format():

$date = date_parse_from_format('d-m-Y', '22-09-2008');
$timestamp = mktime(0, 0, 0, $date['month'], $date['day'], $date['year']);

Note: with strtotime(): the separator is a slash (/), then the American m/d/y is assumed; whereas if the separator is a dash (-) or a dot (.), then the European d-m-y format is assumed. So I think don't need to use strptime()
G
Gordon

If you know the format use strptime because strtotime does a guess for the format, which might not always be correct. Since strptime is not implemented in Windows there is a custom function

http://nl3.php.net/manual/en/function.strptime.php#86572

Remember that the returnvalue tm_year is from 1900! and tm_month is 0-11

Example:

$a = strptime('22-09-2008', '%d-%m-%Y');
$timestamp = mktime(0, 0, 0, $a['tm_mon']+1, $a['tm_mday'], $a['tm_year']+1900)

J
Ja͢ck

If you want to know for sure whether a date gets parsed into something you expect, you can use DateTime::createFromFormat():

$d = DateTime::createFromFormat('d-m-Y', '22-09-2008');
if ($d === false) {
    die("Woah, that date doesn't look right!");
}
echo $d->format('Y-m-d'), PHP_EOL;
// prints 2008-09-22

It's obvious in this case, but e.g. 03-04-2008 could be 3rd of April or 4th of March depending on where you come from :)


DateTime::createFromFormat returns false on error, not null.
k
kk.

Use PHP function strtotime()

echo strtotime('2019/06/06');

date — Format a local time/date


he said, date to timestamp, not time to date
Check this now.
M
Michael Chambers
<?php echo date('M j Y g:i A', strtotime('2013-11-15 13:01:02')); ?>

http://php.net/manual/en/function.date.php


P
Praveen Srinivasan
$time = '22-09-2008';
echo strtotime($time);

P
Phil Jackson
function date_to_stamp( $date, $slash_time = true, $timezone = 'Europe/London', $expression = "#^\d{2}([^\d]*)\d{2}([^\d]*)\d{4}$#is" ) {
    $return = false;
    $_timezone = date_default_timezone_get();
    date_default_timezone_set( $timezone );
    if( preg_match( $expression, $date, $matches ) )
        $return = date( "Y-m-d " . ( $slash_time ? '00:00:00' : "h:i:s" ), strtotime( str_replace( array($matches[1], $matches[2]), '-', $date ) . ' ' . date("h:i:s") ) );
    date_default_timezone_set( $_timezone );
    return $return;
}

// expression may need changing in relation to timezone
echo date_to_stamp('19/03/1986', false) . '<br />';
echo date_to_stamp('19**03**1986', false) . '<br />';
echo date_to_stamp('19.03.1986') . '<br />';
echo date_to_stamp('19.03.1986', false, 'Asia/Aden') . '<br />';
echo date('Y-m-d h:i:s') . '<br />';

//1986-03-19 02:37:30
//1986-03-19 02:37:30
//1986-03-19 00:00:00
//1986-03-19 05:37:30
//2012-02-12 02:37:30

P
Peter Mortensen
<?php echo date('U') ?>

If you want, put it in a MySQL input type timestamp. The above works very well (only in PHP 5 or later):

<?php $timestamp_for_mysql = date('c') ?>

B
BDL

Here is how I'd do it:

function dateToTimestamp($date, $format, $timezone='Europe/Belgrade')
{
    //returns an array containing day start and day end timestamps
    $old_timezone=date_timezone_get();
    date_default_timezone_set($timezone);
    $date=strptime($date,$format);
    $day_start=mktime(0,0,0,++$date['tm_mon'],++$date['tm_mday'],($date['tm_year']+1900));
    $day_end=$day_start+(60*60*24);
    date_default_timezone_set($old_timezone);
    return array('day_start'=>$day_start, 'day_end'=>$day_end);
}

$timestamps=dateToTimestamp('15.02.1991.', '%d.%m.%Y.', 'Europe/London');
$day_start=$timestamps['day_start'];

This way, you let the function know what date format you are using and even specify the timezone.


M
Manoj Sharma

Please be careful about time/zone if you set it to save dates in database, as I got an issue when I compared dates from mysql that converted to timestamp using strtotime. you must use exactly same time/zone before converting date to timestamp otherwise, strtotime() will use default server timezone.

Please see this example: https://3v4l.org/BRlmV

function getthistime($type, $modify = null) {
    $now = new DateTime(null, new DateTimeZone('Asia/Baghdad'));
    if($modify) {
        $now->modify($modify);
    }
    if(!isset($type) || $type == 'datetime') {
        return $now->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');
    }
    if($type == 'time') {
        return $now->format('H:i:s');
    }
    if($type == 'timestamp') {
        return $now->getTimestamp();
    }
}
function timestampfromdate($date) {
    return DateTime::createFromFormat('Y-m-d H:i:s', $date, new DateTimeZone('Asia/Baghdad'))->getTimestamp();
}

echo getthistime('timestamp')."--".
    timestampfromdate(getthistime('datetime'))."--".
    strtotime(getthistime('datetime'));

//getthistime('timestamp') == timestampfromdate(getthistime('datetime')) (true)
//getthistime('timestamp') == strtotime(getthistime('datetime')) (false)

R
Raju Ahmed

For PHP >=5.3, 7 & 8 the this may work-

$date = date_parse_from_format('%Y-%m-%d', "2022-11-15"); //here you can give your desired date in desired format. 
                                                           //just need to keep in mind that date and format matches.

$timestamp = mktime(0, 0, 0, $date['month'], $date['day'], $date['year'] + 2000); //this will return the timestamp

$finalDate= date('Y-m-d H:i:s', $timestamp); //now you can convert your timestamp to desired dateTime format.

O
ObiHill

If you're looking to convert a UTC datetime (2016-02-14T12:24:48.321Z) to timestamp, here's how you'd do it:

function UTCToTimestamp($utc_datetime_str)
{
    preg_match_all('/(.+?)T(.+?)\.(.*?)Z/i', $utc_datetime_str, $matches_arr);
    $datetime_str = $matches_arr[1][0]." ".$matches_arr[2][0];

    return strtotime($datetime_str);
}

$my_utc_datetime_str = '2016-02-14T12:24:48.321Z';
$my_timestamp_str = UTCToTimestamp($my_utc_datetime_str);