60 Day Calculator - 60 Days Forward or Back

Use this 60 day calculator to count 60 days from any start date or count back from a target date. The result shows the weekday, week count, and weekend days.

60 Day Calculator

Forward mode adds days to your start date. Reverse mode counts back from a target date.

Defaults to 60. Use any whole number from 1 to 10,000.

Enabled shifts the result one calendar day earlier.

The date the counter begins on (used in forward mode).

The end-of-count date (used in reverse mode).

Results

Resulting Date
0
Day of the Week 0
Full Weeks 0weeks
Approx. Months 0months
Weekend Days 0days

What Is a 60 Day Calculator?

A 60 day calculator is a quick date arithmetic tool that adds or subtracts exactly 60 days from any date. The 60-day span is a common two-month planning window in everyday life, which makes it a natural fit for two-month billing cycles, employer trial periods, 60-day loan introductory rates, gym and subscription cancellation notices, and 60-day visa or contract review windows, and the same calculator also accepts a custom day count when your plan needs 30, 45, 90, or 120 days. Pick a start date to see the date that lands 60 days later, or flip into reverse mode to find the start date that would land 60 days before a target event.

  • Two-month subscription, billing, and trial cycles: Convert the next due date of a quarterly or 60-day trial bill into a precise calendar date so you can plan cash flow, set autopay, and avoid a surprise charge once the trial ends.
  • 60-day cancellation and contract notice windows: Apartment leases, gym memberships, telco contracts, and many freelance agreements require a 60-day notice. Forward mode shows the exact exit date; reverse mode shows when to send the notice to be out by a target date.
  • Loan introductory rate, refinance, and escrow windows: Many mortgages, car loans, and credit cards reset rates or payments on a 60-day cycle. Forward mode shows the next rate-change date; reverse mode shows the application date that lands the rate change on a target event.
  • Return, refund, and visa or document review windows: Retailers, customs agencies, and immigration offices often quote deadlines in 60 days. The calculator turns a 60-day review window into a real calendar date you can mark on a shared calendar.

The math behind a 60-day counter is simple date arithmetic, but doing it in your head is error prone: month lengths vary from 28 to 31 days, and February 29 only shows up every four years. This tool follows the same convention as the Omni 60 day page, and the result panel also shows full weeks, an approximate month count, and the weekend days inside the window.

If you mostly need a live timer toward a single deadline, the date countdown calculator shows the days, hours, minutes, and seconds remaining, which is faster to glance at for a fixed event.

How the 60 Day Calculator Works

It uses standard calendar arithmetic: it reads the start (or target) date, applies the chosen offset, and then iterates the inclusive day range to derive the weekday, week count, month count, and weekend day count. The include start date toggle is the only switch that changes the resulting date.

resultDate = startDate + (numberOfDays - 1) when includeStartDate is true resultDate = startDate + numberOfDays when includeStartDate is false
  • startDate: The calendar date the counter begins on. Used in forward mode and defaults to today.
  • numberOfDays: How many days to add (forward) or subtract (reverse). Default 60, valid 1 to 10,000.
  • includeStartDate: If true, the start date is counted as day 1 so 60 days lands 59 calendar days later. If false, day 1 is the day after the start date so 60 days lands exactly 60 calendar days later.
  • mode: Forward computes the resulting date from the start date. Reverse computes the start date from a chosen target date.

Worked example: 60 days from June 14, 2026 (default, exclude start date)

Start date = 2026-06-14, Number of days = 60, Include start date = false.

June contributes 16 days (Jun 15 through Jun 30), leaving 44. July contributes 31 days, leaving 13. August contributes 13 days (Aug 1 through Aug 13), landing on August 13, 2026.

Resulting date: Thursday, August 13, 2026. Full weeks: 8.6. Weekend days inside the range: 16.

A 60-day block almost always crosses two calendar months and is a useful rule of thumb for two-month trial periods, 60-day notice windows, and quarterly planning cycles.

Worked example: 60 days from February 1, 2024 (a leap year)

Start date = 2024-02-01, Number of days = 60, Include start date = false.

February contributes 28 days (Feb 2 through Feb 29), leaving 32. March contributes 31 days, landing on April 1, 2024.

Resulting date: Monday, April 1, 2024. Full weeks: 8.6. Weekend days inside the range: 18.

When a 60-day count crosses February 29 in a leap year, the result lands one calendar day earlier than the same span in a common year because February contributes 29 days instead of 28.

According to Time and Date, a 365-day year divides into 12 equal months of about 30.4167 days, which is the divisor this calculator uses for the approximate month count

According to Time and Date, a leap year contains 366 days with the extra day inserted at the end of February, while a common year contains 365 days, which is why a 60-day count that crosses February 29 lands one calendar day earlier in a leap year than in a common year

For a longer quarterly review window, the 100 day calculator returns a 100-day result with the same weekday, week, and weekend breakdowns this calculator uses.

Key Concepts Explained

Four ideas explain every result the panel shows:

Calendar Day vs. Business Day

The calculator counts every calendar day, including Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays. If you need 60 business days, use a separate business-day tool and add about 16 to 20 extra calendar days to absorb the weekends.

Include vs. Exclude the Start Date

Excluding the start date (the default) means the result is exactly 60 calendar days after the start date. Including the start date counts it as day 1, so 60 days lands 59 calendar days later.

Approximate Months (30.42-day average)

60 days equals about 1.97 months because a common year holds 365 days, which divides into 12 equal months of 30.4167 days. The result is an estimate, not a calendar-month count.

Weekend Days Inside the Range

A 60-day span covers 8 full weeks plus 4 extra days. If the 4 extra days are weekdays, the range contains 16 weekend days; if they include one or two weekend days, it contains 17 or 18.

These definitions matter when the result is shared. A 60-day plan almost always means calendar days, but a 60-day sprint inside a team usually means business days, so match the convention to the audience. The 4-extra-day rule also explains why the weekday of the result is always 4 days after the start weekday.

When the audience expects 60 workdays instead of 60 calendar days, the working days calculator subtracts weekends and optional public holidays from the same starting inputs.

How to Use the Calculator

Five short steps are enough to get a trustworthy 60-day result.

  1. 1 Choose forward or reverse mode: Use forward mode to find a date 60 days from a start date. Use reverse mode to count 60 days back from a target date.
  2. 2 Set the day count: Leave the number at 60 for the default count, or change it to any whole number from 1 to 10,000 for a different span.
  3. 3 Enter the start or target date: In forward mode, pick the start date (defaults to today). In reverse mode, pick the target date you are counting back from.
  4. 4 Decide whether to include the start date: Leave the toggle off for the common convention where day 1 is the day after the start date. Turn it on if you want the start date to count as day 1.
  5. 5 Read the result and the breakdowns: The result panel shows the resulting date, its weekday, the full-week count, the approximate months, and how many weekend days the range covers.

Practical example: starting a 60-day employer trial on June 14, 2026 (a Sunday) with the start date excluded, the calculator returns August 13, 2026 (a Thursday) and reports 8.6 full weeks and 16 weekend days.

Benefits of Using the 60 Day Calculator

A purpose-built 60-day counter saves time and removes calendar-counting errors.

  • Removes leap-year and month-length errors: The calculator handles the 28-day February, the 29-day leap February, and the 30 vs. 31-day months for you, so the result date is always correct.
  • Works in both directions: Forward and reverse mode mean you can find either what date is 60 days from X or what date is 60 days before Y without switching tools.
  • Surfaces the weekday early: The weekday of the result date is shown next to the date so you can plan around workdays and avoid landing a milestone on a weekend by accident.
  • Estimates months and weekends at a glance: The week count, the approximate month count, and the weekend-day count help you budget time, set check-in dates, and explain the timeline to other people.
  • Pairs with custom day counts: The day count field accepts any whole number from 1 to 10,000, so the same calculator covers 7-day, 30-day, 45-day, 90-day, and 120-day plans without a separate tool.

The result panel stays consistent across the 30-, 45-, 60-, 100-, 120-, and 180-day variants, so switching between them only takes a moment. For a live timer use the date countdown tool; for a fixed two-date span use the days-between-dates tool.

If your plan needs a one-month review cycle instead, the 30 day calculator follows the same forward and reverse convention for a 30-day span and uses the same weekday and weekend breakdowns.

Factors That Affect Your Results

Three variables determine what the result looks like, and two limitations tell you when to double-check the answer.

Leap Years

A start date that crosses February 29 in a leap year produces a result date that is one calendar day earlier than the same span in a common year, because February contributes 29 days instead of 28.

Start Date Convention

Including the start date shifts the result by exactly one calendar day, and the example values stay consistent with whichever convention is active.

Weekday Distribution

A 60-day window covers 8 full weeks plus 4 extra days. If the 4 extra days are weekdays, the range contains 16 weekend days; if one of them falls on a weekend day, the range contains 17; if two of them fall on weekend days, it contains 18.

  • The result is a calendar-day count. It does not subtract public holidays, school breaks, or company shutdowns, so any business-day interpretation needs a separate tool.
  • The approximate months figure uses a 30.42-day average and is meant for at-a-glance planning. For exact month arithmetic, anchor the start and end dates to a calendar.

The weekend-day count is the easiest signal on the result panel: 16 means the extra days fell on weekdays, while 17 or 18 means at least one or two of them fell on a weekend day.

According to Omni Calculator, the standard 60-day counter defaults to a 60-day span with an optional Include start date toggle and also supports reverse calculation by editing the end date, which is the same convention this calculator follows

When the start and end dates are both already fixed, the days between dates calculator returns the gap between them directly without picking a direction.

60 day calculator interface showing start date, number of days, include start date toggle, and resulting date plus weekday and week breakdowns
60 day calculator interface showing start date, number of days, include start date toggle, and resulting date plus weekday and week breakdowns

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How do you calculate 60 days from a date?

A: Pick the start date, leave the number of days at 60, and choose whether to include the start date. The calculator adds 60 (or 59, if you include the start date) to the start date and returns the resulting calendar date.

Q: What is 60 days from today?

A: Open the calculator with the default 60-day count and today's date pre-filled. The result panel will show the date 60 days from today, along with the weekday, the full-week count, and the weekend day count.

Q: How many weeks is 60 days?

A: 60 days equals 8 full weeks plus 4 extra days, so the result panel reports 8.6 weeks. The 4 extra days are why the weekday of the result is exactly 4 days after the weekday of the start date.

Q: Is 60 days the same as two months?

A: Roughly. Calendar months range from 28 to 31 days, so two months can be anywhere from 59 to 62 days, and 60 days is a useful approximation. Many subscriptions, employer trials, and visa review windows use a 60-day cycle for convenience, but the exact rule depends on the specific contract, policy, or law that applies, so always confirm with the original agreement.

Q: Does the 60 day calculator include the start date?

A: By default, the calculator excludes the start date, so day 1 is the day after the start date. Toggle 'include start date' on to count the start date as day 1, which shifts the result one calendar day earlier.

Q: Can I calculate 60 days from a past date?

A: Yes. Enter any past date in the start date field, keep the default 60-day count, and the calculator will return the future date that is 60 calendar days after that past date.