30, 60, and 90 Days From Today — Find the Exact Date Free
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"30 days from today" sounds simple, but when you try to calculate it yourself — count the days in the current month, roll into the next, track where you end up — it takes more mental effort than it should. And if you are working backward to find what date triggered a 30-day window that expires today, the math becomes even harder.
Our free date calculator handles this in seconds. Enter today's date, add 30 (or 60 or 90), and see the exact resulting date and what day of the week it falls on. Here are the most common reasons people need these calculations and how to run each one.
What Is 30 Days From Today?
Open the Owl Date Calculator. Under "Add / Subtract Days," enter today's date in the Start Date field and 30 in the days field. Click Calculate. The result shows the exact date and day of the week.
Common uses for 30-day calculations:
- Invoice payment due dates ("net 30")
- Return windows for online purchases
- Subscription trial end dates
- Lease notice period deadlines
- Probationary period end dates
- Medication refill reminders
What Is 60 Days From Today?
Change the days field to 60 and recalculate. The 60-day mark matters for:
- Credit card dispute deadlines (the Fair Credit Billing Act's 60-day window)
- Real estate financing contingency periods
- Contractor and freelancer payment terms
- Visa stay duration limits
- Insurance claim submission deadlines
- 60-day employment notice periods
What Is 90 Days From Today?
The 90-day mark (approximately one quarter) is one of the most commonly used deadline lengths in business and law:
- 90-day employment plans (30-60-90 day reviews)
- Service agreement terms and renewal notices
- IRS and tax authority deadlines for certain filings
- Schengen zone visa allowance (90 days in any 180-day period)
- Warranty claim periods
- Probationary employment periods
- Many health insurance waiting periods
- EEOC/NLRB charge filing windows
What Was 30, 60, or 90 Days Ago?
To go backward, enter a negative number: -30 for 30 days ago, -60 for 60 days ago, -90 for 90 days ago. Enter today as the Start Date, enter the negative number, and get the past date.
Common uses for looking backward:
- "When was 90 days ago?" — to find the start of a rolling window
- "The incident was 30 days before today" — find the triggering event date
- "The statute gives 60 days from the triggering event — what was that date?" — find the window start
How 30/60/90 Days Compare in Weeks and Months
| Period | Calendar Days | Approx. Business Days | Weeks | Months |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 days | 30 | ~22 | ~4.3 weeks | ~1 month |
| 60 days | 60 | ~44 | ~8.6 weeks | ~2 months |
| 90 days | 90 | ~65 | ~12.9 weeks | ~3 months (1 quarter) |
The "Days Between Two Dates" section also shows your date range broken down into weeks, days, and approximate months — so once you calculate the target date, you can run it through the other section for a complete breakdown.
Find Your Date Instantly
30, 60, 90 days from today — enter any start date and get the exact result. Free, no account.
Open Date CalculatorFrequently Asked Questions
Is 30 days from today the same as "one month from today"?
Not exactly. 30 days is always 30 days. One month from today is the same calendar date in the next month (January 31 + 1 month = February 28/29). For legal or contract purposes, "30 days" and "one month" can mean different dates — always check which the document specifies.
Does 90 days from today cross a year boundary?
It depends on your current date. The calculator handles this correctly — it does not reset at the year boundary. 90 days from December 1 will land in late February of the following year.
What is the date 180 days from today?
Use the same Add/Subtract tool and enter 180. 180 days is approximately 6 months, commonly used for extended warranties, Schengen visa rules (90 days in any 180-day period), and insurance policy terms.

