What is 30 Days From Today?

What is 30 Days From Today?

Find out the exact date that is 30 days from today or 30 Business days from today. Our calculator updates automatically every day so the result is always current. Select a different interval below to explore other future dates.

30 days from today

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The 30 calendar days between today and your result date contain — business days (excluding weekends).

Relative Dates — Including 30 Days Ago From Today

The table below shows several dates relative to today and what date falls 30 days from each of them. The row labelled 30 days ago from today shows the date that was 30 days in the past — useful if you need to check a look-back period.

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Date Calculator — Any Interval From Any Date

Calculate any number of days, weeks, or months from any starting date. Leave the date blank to count from today.

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30 Days From a Custom Start Date

Need to calculate 30 days from a date other than today? Enter any start date below. This is useful when your 30-day period began on a past date — a contract signing, invoice issue date, or formal notice received — and you need to find when day 30 falls.

30 Calendar Days From That Date

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30 Business Days From That Date

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30 Business Days From Today Calculator

30 business days from today is a completely different date from 30 calendar days from today. Because business days exclude Saturdays and Sundays, 30 business days spans approximately 42 to 44 calendar days depending on which day of the week you start. This matters enormously for employment law, court deadlines, and financial transactions that specify working days rather than calendar days.

30 Business Days From Today

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For Comparison: 30 Calendar Days

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30 Business Days From a Custom Start Date

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Countdown to Your 30-Day Deadline

If you are tracking a live deadline, use the real-time countdown below. It updates automatically as time passes.

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Add Your 30-Day Deadline to Your Calendar

Save your 30-day deadline instantly so you never miss it. These links are pre-filled with the correct date.

Most people who search for the date 30 days from today are not idly curious. They are calculating a real deadline with real consequences. Getting it wrong by even one day can invalidate a legal notice, trigger a late payment penalty, or forfeit a consumer right. The sections below cover the most common use cases and what the law actually says about how to count.

30-Day Notice to Vacate: Landlord and Tenant Law

The most common reason people need to know when is 30 days from today is a residential tenancy notice. In most US states, a tenant or landlord must give a minimum of 30 days written notice before terminating a month-to-month lease. California requires 30 days if the tenant has lived there less than a year, and 60 days if longer. New York, Florida, and Texas each have their own minimum notice periods.

The critical question is whether the notice clock starts on the day the notice is delivered or the day after. Under the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act, which many states follow, the notice period typically begins on the day after the notice is given, making day one tomorrow and day 30 the actual last day. If day 30 falls on a Sunday or a public holiday, most jurisdictions treat the deadline as falling on the next business day, but this is state-specific — always verify with your local statute.

Employment: Resignation and Notice Periods

Employment contracts frequently specify a 30-day notice period for resignation. Whether that means 30 calendar days from today or 30 working days depends entirely on the contract wording. If the contract says “30 days” without qualification, UK employment law and most US state laws treat this as calendar days. If it says “30 working days,” weekends and bank holidays are excluded, pushing the final date approximately six weeks out.

The day you hand in your resignation is typically day zero under employment law, meaning day 30 is the last day of your notice. Getting this wrong by starting the count from day one (the day after) would mean working an extra day beyond your legal obligation.

Net 30 Days From Today: Invoice Payment Terms

Net 30 days from today is one of the most widely used payment terms in business-to-business invoicing. “Net 30” means the full invoice balance is due within 30 calendar days of the invoice date. The invoice date is day zero. Day 30 is the payment due date. The term “net” simply refers to the full amount owing, as opposed to a discounted early payment amount.

Weekends and public holidays do not extend a net 30 deadline unless the contract explicitly says so — this distinguishes net 30 from court-filing deadlines. If you issue an invoice today and your terms are net 30, payment is legally due on the date shown by this calculator. Late payment interest begins accruing the following day under most commercial law frameworks including the US Prompt Payment Act for government contracts and the UK Late Payment of Commercial Debts Act.

Court Filing Deadlines and Legal Notices

Court deadlines involving 30 calendar days use the most strict counting rules of any context. Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 6(a), when counting a period of days, you exclude the day of the event that starts the period (the trigger date) and include the last day. If the last day falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or federal legal holiday, the period extends to the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday.

Most state courts follow identical or nearly identical rules. This means a 30-day deadline in a court context almost always uses this calculator’s result — exclusive of today, inclusive of day 30 — but with an automatic extension if day 30 lands on a weekend. Missing a court filing deadline by even one day can result in dismissal, default judgment, or waiver of rights. When in doubt, file one day early.

Consumer Rights: Return Windows and Subscription Cancellations

Many retailers and subscription services offer a 30-day return or cancellation window. Under US Federal Trade Commission rules and various state consumer protection laws, the clock on these periods typically starts on the day of purchase or the day of delivery, with day 30 being the last eligible day to act. The EU Consumer Rights Directive gives consumers 14 days for most remote purchases but 30 days is common for extended return policies at major retailers.

Subscription cancellation windows in SaaS and streaming services are generally calendar days with no weekend extension. If your 30-day free trial started today, cancelling on day 31 will typically result in being charged.

30 Days From Today Including Today — Does Day One Count?

This is the most commonly misunderstood aspect of date counting, and the confusion has real consequences. This calculator works on the standard legal convention: today is day zero. The first counted day is tomorrow. The 30th counted day is the result shown above. Under this convention, 30 days from today including today would actually end on day 29 of the standard count — one day earlier than this calculator shows.

If you need to count 30 days inclusively (where today is day one and you need the 30th day to be 29 days from now), the date is: calculating….

The vast majority of legal, financial, and contractual 30-day periods use the exclusive convention (today = day zero). When a contract, statute, or court rule says “within 30 days,” it almost always means the 30-day period begins the day after the triggering event and ends at the close of business on the 30th day thereafter.

30 Days From Today vs One Month From Today: They Are Not the Same

A point that causes significant confusion in contracts is that 30 calendar days and one calendar month are almost never the same date. If today is January 29, 30 calendar days from today is February 28 (or 27 in a non-leap year). But one month from January 29 is February 28 too — actually it coincides in this case. Start from January 31 however: 30 days from today lands on March 2, while one month from today would be February 28. Start from March 1: 30 days from today is March 31, while one month later is April 1.

In legal drafting, “30 days” and “one month” are treated as different constructs. Contracts that say “30 days” mean 30 literal calendar days. Contracts that say “one month” mean the same day of the following month, or the last day of that month if no equivalent date exists. When a statute matters, always use the specific wording. This calculator measures 30 calendar days, not one month.

Quick Reference: 30 Days From Today, Tomorrow, and 30 Days Ago

30 days from todaySee above
30 days from tomorrowSee above
30 days ago from todaySee above
30 business days from todaySee above

When is 30 days from today? The exact date is shown at the top of this page and updates automatically every day. What is the date 30 days from today? It is the date shown at the top. 30 calendar days from today means counting every day including weekends and holidays — the main calculator above does exactly this. 30 days from tomorrow is one day later than 30 days from today, since the count starts from tomorrow rather than today.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 30 days from today?

30 days from today is the date shown at the very top of this page, calculated automatically from your device clock so it is always accurate for the current day. The result is 30 calendar days from today, counting every day including weekends and public holidays, using the standard exclusive convention where today is day zero and the 30th day is the result date.

When is 30 days from today?

The exact date that is 30 days from today is displayed prominently above. Because the calculation runs on your device using JavaScript, the answer is correct for whatever day you visit — you do not need to update any input. The day of the week, country format options, and countdown are all shown alongside the date.

Is today included when counting 30 days?

By the standard legal and contractual convention used by this calculator, today is not counted. Today is day zero. The first counted day is tomorrow, and day 30 is the result shown above. If you need to count inclusively with today as day one, your 30th day lands on the date shown in the “including today” row, which is one day earlier than the standard result.

What is 30 days from tomorrow?

30 days from tomorrow is one day later than the main result on this page, since the count begins from tomorrow rather than today. The date is shown in the quick reference table above. This is relevant if, for example, you received a formal notice today and the notice period is stated to begin on the following day.

What are 30 calendar days from today?

30 calendar days from today is exactly the same as 30 days from today — every day is counted regardless of whether it falls on a weekend or public holiday. This contrasts with 30 business days, which excludes Saturdays and Sundays and therefore lands approximately 42 to 44 calendar days from today. The main calculator at the top of this page calculates calendar days.

What does net 30 mean?

Net 30 is a payment term meaning the full invoice balance is due within 30 calendar days of the invoice date. The invoice date is treated as day zero and day 30 is the payment deadline. Weekends and public holidays do not extend a net 30 deadline unless the contract specifies otherwise. Net 30 is one of the most common terms in business-to-business commerce and is legally enforceable in most jurisdictions.

What is 30 business days from today?

30 business days from today is significantly later than 30 calendar days because business days exclude Saturdays and Sundays. Depending on which day of the week today falls, 30 business days spans between 42 and 44 calendar days from today. The 30 Business Days Calculator above shows the exact date and how many calendar days it represents. Always check your contract or statute carefully to confirm whether “30 days” means calendar or business days.

Does a 30-day deadline extend if it falls on a weekend or holiday?

It depends on the context. For court filing deadlines, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 6(a) and most state equivalents automatically extend a deadline that falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or public holiday to the next business day. For contractual deadlines such as net 30 invoices, lease notices, and return policies, there is no automatic extension unless the contract says so — day 30 is day 30 regardless of what day of the week it falls on. When the deadline matters legally, always verify the rule that applies.

What is the difference between 30 days and one month?

30 days and one month are almost never the same date. One calendar month advances the date by one month (e.g., January 15 becomes February 15), while 30 days adds exactly 30 days to the date. Because months have 28, 29, 30, or 31 days, the two values can differ by up to three days. In legal drafting, “30 days” always means 30 literal calendar days, not one month.

What is 30 days from today including today?

30 days from today counted inclusively, where today is day one, is one day earlier than the standard result shown at the top of this page. This is because the inclusive count treats today as the first of the 30 days, so the 30th day arrives one day sooner. The inclusive result date is shown in the quick reference section above. The exclusive convention (today = day zero) is the legal and contractual standard in the vast majority of contexts.

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