Unix Timestamp 68684400
seconds · 54 years ago
⚡ Quick Answer
68684400 = Mar 5, 1972, 11:00:00 PM UTC
ISO 8601: 1972-03-05T23:00:00.000Z
Output Formats
ISO 8601
1972-03-05T23:00:00.000Z
RFC 2822
Sun, 05 Mar 1972 23:00:00 GMT
Human Readable
Sunday, March 5, 1972 at 11:00:00 PM UTC
Unix Seconds
68684400
Unix Milliseconds
68684400000
Day of Week
Sunday
Timezone Breakdown
UTC
Mar 5, 1972, 11:00:00 PM UTC
US Eastern
Mar 5, 1972, 06:00:00 PM EST
US Pacific
Mar 5, 1972, 03:00:00 PM PST
UK London
Mar 5, 1972, 11:00:00 PM GMT
Japan Tokyo
Mar 6, 1972, 08:00:00 AM GMT+9
Australia Sydney
Mar 6, 1972, 09:00:00 AM GMT+10
Related Timestamps
Frequently Asked Questions
What date is Unix timestamp 68684400?
Unix timestamp 68684400 represents Sunday, March 5, 1972 at 11:00:00 PM UTC. This is 54 years ago from the current time.
Is 68684400 in seconds or milliseconds?
68684400 has 8 digits, which means it is in seconds. Multiply by 1,000 to get milliseconds: 68684400000.
How do I convert 68684400 in JavaScript?
// Normalized to Unix seconds: 68684400 const tsSec = 68684400; new Date(tsSec * 1000).toISOString(); // "1972-03-05T23:00:00.000Z"
How do I convert 68684400 in Python?
import datetime
ts = 68684400
dt = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(
ts, tz=datetime.timezone.utc)
print(dt.isoformat())
# "1972-03-05T23:00:00.000Z"What is the Unix timestamp for right now?
Use our live timestamp converter to get the current Unix timestamp. In JavaScript: Math.floor(Date.now() / 1000). In Python: int(time.time()). In bash: date +%s.
Need to convert a different timestamp?
Our full converter supports seconds, milliseconds, microseconds, 25+ timezones, and auto-detection.
Open Full Converter →Related Guides & Tutorials
// developers also readComplete Guide to Unix Timestamp Precision in 2026
The definitive guide to Unix timestamp precision, formats, and edge cases in production.
Unix Timestamps in JavaScript
Date.now(), the Temporal API, and timezone-aware timestamp handling in JavaScript.
Session Management with Timestamp Expiration
JWT expiration, session timeouts, and token refresh using Unix timestamps.