Date & time calculator

Hours Calculator

Convert mixed duration parts into total hours, or add and subtract two duration blocks.

Last reviewed: July 6, 2026Date-time engine v1.0.0

Date & time calculator

Hours Calculator

Calculations run locally from the values entered. Endpoint rules, working-day rules and assumptions are labelled in the result.

Deterministic calendar math

Mode

Convert one duration to total hours.

Convert inputs

Enter values and choose Calculate to show the result below the calculator.

Formula and assumptions

Primary formula

Total hours = total seconds / 3,600.

Input assumptions

Dates use the Gregorian calendar. Times use entered wall-clock values. No official holiday or timezone database is queried by these calculators.

Precision note

Date calculations use deterministic Gregorian calendar-day arithmetic. Time calculations use entered wall-clock times and do not infer daylight-saving transitions.

Date, time and calendar flow

Parse

Read dates, times, durations and selected endpoint or workday conventions from labelled fields.

Validate

Reject impossible dates, invalid times, negative durations and oversized working-day ranges.

Calculate

Use deterministic TypeScript calendar arithmetic without external date or holiday services.

Label

Show the main result, totals, warnings, assumptions and exportable summaries.

What is the Hours Calculator?

Hours Calculator is a NexaCalc date and time tool for duration conversion to hours. It uses explicit user-entered dates, times and calendar rules so the result can be checked without hidden data feeds.

The calculator is designed for planning and education. Calendar rules can differ by country, workplace, contract or legal context, so important deadlines should be confirmed independently.

How to use the Hours Calculator

Choose the mode, enter the labelled dates or times, select the endpoint or working-day convention where shown, then press Calculate. Reset restores the built-in example.

Results include the main answer, supporting totals, a short method note, and export actions for quick copying or printing.

Formula and method

Each duration part is converted to seconds, combined by mode, then divided by 3,600.

Calculation example

2 days, 5 hours and 30 minutes equals 53.5 hours.

Assumptions

Dates use the proleptic Gregorian calendar and YYYY-MM-DD input. Time-of-day fields use a 24-hour clock unless a page states another convention.

Limitations

This calculator avoids external paid APIs and does not infer official local holidays, payroll rules, legal filing rules or daylight-saving transitions.

  • Calendar months and years are not fixed-hour units.
  • Negative duration output is possible in subtract mode.

Privacy and performance

Inputs are calculated in the browser session and are not sent to a date, time or calendar API. The deterministic TypeScript engine keeps the page fast on shared hosting.

Frequently asked questions

Does the Hours Calculator use live external calendar data?

No. Phase 1 date-time tools calculate from the values and calendar rules you enter. Holidays must be entered manually where relevant.

Why do endpoint settings change the answer?

A date span can mean elapsed days or a count of calendar dates touched. NexaCalc labels the endpoint convention so the result is clear.

Does this handle daylight-saving time?

Date calculations use calendar days. Time duration tools use entered wall-clock times and do not infer daylight-saving jumps from locations.

Can I use this for legal or payroll deadlines?

Use it as a planning check only. Official deadlines can depend on local law, holidays, contract language and employer policy.

References

  • ISO 8601 date notation for calendar date input format. Source.
  • Unicode CLDR weekday and calendar conventions. Source.
  • ECMAScript Internationalization API for browser date and number display conventions. Source.

Calendar methods reviewed July 6, 2026.

Educational disclaimer

This calculator provides mathematical results from the values, conventions and methods you enter. Verify important academic, engineering or professional work independently.