Enter a number of days and instantly see the exact resulting date, starting from today by default.
Estimates only, not professional advice. This calculator is provided for general informational purposes and uses standard, documented formulas (shown in the sections below). It doesn't account for every factor a lender, employer, physician, or other professional would consider for your specific situation — verify important decisions with a qualified professional before relying on these numbers.
The question "what date is 90 days from today?" comes up constantly — trial periods, visa windows, medical follow-ups, contract deadlines. This calculator starts from today's date automatically, so you only need to enter the number of days to get an exact answer, including the day of the week.
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How it works
1
Today's date is pre-filled
The starting date defaults to today automatically — change it if you want to calculate from a different starting point instead.
2
Enter the number of days
Type how many days forward (positive) or backward (negative, for "X days ago") you want to calculate.
3
Read the resulting date
See the exact resulting calendar date, including the day of the week, updated instantly as you type.
4
Share a specific offset
Each offset gets its own shareable URL — bookmark or send a link for "90 days from today" and it stays accurate whenever it's opened, recalculating from the day it's viewed.
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Why “days from today” is common enough to deserve its own calculator
The add-days-to-date calculator already supports this exact calculation, but “days from today” specifically is common enough — and specific enough in its phrasing — that starting pre-filled with today’s date removes a step: instead of first entering today’s date manually and then the offset, you only need the number of days. That small difference matters for a calculation people run repeatedly with different offsets (checking 30, 60, and 90 days from today in quick succession, for instance).
Common day-offsets and what they typically represent
90 days is one of the most frequently checked offsets — it corresponds to many visa short-stay limits, trial-period lengths, and standard contract notice periods. 180 days often relates to passport validity requirements for international travel (many countries require at least 6 months of remaining validity). 30 and 60 days show up constantly in return policies, subscription renewals, and standard business notice periods. This calculator handles any offset you type, not just these common ones, but they’re worth knowing as reference points.
A calculation that stays live, not frozen
Because the starting date defaults to “today” rather than a fixed date, a link to this calculator with an offset like 90 days will always calculate 90 days from whatever day it’s opened — useful for a saved link you intend to reuse, less useful if you specifically want to preserve a calculation anchored to one particular day. For a calculation frozen to a specific starting date, override the starting date field with an explicit date instead of leaving it on today’s default.
When you need calendar days versus business days
This default mode counts every calendar day, including weekends. If your use case specifically requires business days only — a common distinction in contract and processing-time language — the dedicated business days calculator handles that instead.
Frequently asked questions
Does "90 days from today" always mean 90 calendar days, not business days?
Yes, by default this calculates calendar days, including weekends. If you need a business-days-only version (skipping weekends), use the business days calculator instead, which is built specifically for weekday-only counting.
What are common reasons people calculate days from today?
Trial period and subscription expiration dates, visa and immigration status windows (many specify exact day counts like 90 or 180 days), medical follow-up scheduling, contract and notice-period deadlines, and return/refund windows are among the most common — situations where a rule is stated as "X days from Y" and you need the exact resulting calendar date.
Why do some visa and immigration rules use 90 or 180 day windows specifically?
These figures often correspond to specific legal thresholds — for example, many visa-waiver and short-stay rules use a 90-day limit within a rolling period, and some countries define minimum passport validity as 180 days beyond a travel date. This calculator doesn't provide immigration advice, but it gives you the exact resulting date so you can check it against your specific rule's stated requirement.
Can I calculate a date that's a certain number of days in the past instead of the future?
Yes — enter a negative number of days (like -30) to calculate a date that many days before today, useful for "when did the 30-day window that ends today start" type questions.
Does the result update if I revisit the page tomorrow?
If you calculated from today's default starting date, revisiting the same bookmarked link later will recalculate from whatever "today" is when you open it, not the original day you calculated it — since the starting date field defaults to the current date, not a fixed one. If you need the calculation frozen to a specific starting date regardless of when it's viewed, set an explicit starting date instead of leaving it on today's default.
Related tools
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