1351
votes

How to add days to current Date using JavaScript. Does JavaScript have a built in function like .Net's AddDay?

30

30 Answers

1443
votes

You can create one with:-

Date.prototype.addDays = function(days) {
    var date = new Date(this.valueOf());
    date.setDate(date.getDate() + days);
    return date;
}

var date = new Date();

console.log(date.addDays(5));

This takes care of automatically incrementing the month if necessary. For example:

8/31 + 1 day will become 9/1.

The problem with using setDate directly is that it's a mutator and that sort of thing is best avoided. ECMA saw fit to treat Date as a mutable class rather than an immutable structure.

868
votes

Correct Answer:

function addDays(date, days) {
  var result = new Date(date);
  result.setDate(result.getDate() + days);
  return result;
}

Incorrect Answer:

This answer sometimes provides the correct result but very often returns the wrong year and month. The only time this answer works is when the date that you are adding days to happens to have the current year and month.

// Don't do it this way!
function addDaysWRONG(date, days) {
  var result = new Date();
  result.setDate(date.getDate() + days);
  return result;
}

Proof / Example

Check this JsFiddle

// Correct
function addDays(date, days) {
    var result = new Date(date);
    result.setDate(result.getDate() + days);
    return result;
}

// Bad Year/Month
function addDaysWRONG(date, days) {
    var result = new Date();
    result.setDate(date.getDate() + days);
    return result;
}

// Bad during DST
function addDaysDstFail(date, days) {
    var dayms = (days * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000);
    return new Date(date.getTime() + dayms);    
}

// TEST
function formatDate(date) {
    return (date.getMonth() + 1) + '/' + date.getDate() + '/' + date.getFullYear();
}

$('tbody tr td:first-child').each(function () {
    var $in = $(this);
    var $out = $('<td/>').insertAfter($in).addClass("answer");
    var $outFail = $('<td/>').insertAfter($out);
    var $outDstFail = $('<td/>').insertAfter($outFail);
    var date = new Date($in.text());
    var correctDate = formatDate(addDays(date, 1));
    var failDate = formatDate(addDaysWRONG(date, 1));
    var failDstDate = formatDate(addDaysDstFail(date, 1));

    $out.text(correctDate);
    $outFail.text(failDate);
    $outDstFail.text(failDstDate);
    $outFail.addClass(correctDate == failDate ? "right" : "wrong");
    $outDstFail.addClass(correctDate == failDstDate ? "right" : "wrong");
});
body {
    font-size: 14px;
}

table {
    border-collapse:collapse;
}
table, td, th {
    border:1px solid black;
}
td {
    padding: 2px;
}

.wrong {
    color: red;
}
.right {
    color: green;
}
.answer {
    font-weight: bold;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<table>
    <tbody>
        <tr>
            <th colspan="4">DST Dates</th>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <th>Input</th>
            <th>+1 Day</th>
            <th>+1 Day Fail</th>
            <th>+1 Day DST Fail</th>
        </tr>
        <tr><td>03/10/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>11/03/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>03/09/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>11/02/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>03/08/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>11/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr>
            <th colspan="4">2013</th>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <th>Input</th>
            <th>+1 Day</th>
            <th>+1 Day Fail</th>
            <th>+1 Day DST Fail</th>
        </tr>
        <tr><td>01/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>02/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>03/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>04/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>05/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>06/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>07/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>08/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>09/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>10/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>11/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr><td>12/01/2013</td></tr>
        <tr>
            <th colspan="4">2014</th>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <th>Input</th>
            <th>+1 Day</th>
            <th>+1 Day Fail</th>
            <th>+1 Day DST Fail</th>
        </tr>
        <tr><td>01/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>02/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>03/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>04/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>05/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>06/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>07/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>08/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>09/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>10/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>11/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr><td>12/01/2014</td></tr>
        <tr>
            <th colspan="4">2015</th>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <th>Input</th>
            <th>+1 Day</th>
            <th>+1 Day Fail</th>
            <th>+1 Day DST Fail</th>
        </tr>
        <tr><td>01/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>02/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>03/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>04/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>05/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>06/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>07/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>08/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>09/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>10/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>11/01/2015</td></tr>
        <tr><td>12/01/2015</td></tr>
    </tbody>
</table>
227
votes
var today = new Date();
var tomorrow = new Date();
tomorrow.setDate(today.getDate()+1);

Be careful, because this can be tricky. When setting "tomorrow", it only works because it's current value matches the year and month for "today". However, setting to a date number like "32" normally will still work just fine to move it to the next month.

140
votes

My simple solution is:

nextday=new Date(oldDate.getFullYear(),oldDate.getMonth(),oldDate.getDate()+1);

this solution does not have problem with daylight saving time. Also, one can add/sub any offset for years, months, days etc.

day=new Date(oldDate.getFullYear()-2,oldDate.getMonth()+22,oldDate.getDate()+61);

is correct code.

122
votes

These answers seem confusing to me, I prefer:

var ms = new Date().getTime() + 86400000;
var tomorrow = new Date(ms);

getTime() gives us milliseconds since 1970, and 86400000 is the number of milliseconds in a day. Hence, ms contains milliseconds for the desired date.

Using the millisecond constructor gives the desired date object.

53
votes

Try

var someDate = new Date();
var duration = 2; //In Days
someDate.setTime(someDate.getTime() +  (duration * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000));

Using setDate() to add a date wont solve your problem, try adding some days to a Feb month, if you try to add new days to it, it wont result in what you expected.

45
votes

Just spent ages trying to work out what the deal was with the year not adding when following the lead examples below.

If you want to just simply add n days to the date you have you are best to just go:

myDate.setDate(myDate.getDate() + n);

or the longwinded version

var theDate = new Date(2013, 11, 15);
var myNewDate = new Date(theDate);
myNewDate.setDate(myNewDate.getDate() + 30);
console.log(myNewDate);

This today/tomorrow stuff is confusing. By setting the current date into your new date variable you will mess up the year value. if you work from the original date you won't.

35
votes

Here is the way that use to add days, months, and years for a particular date in Javascript.

// To add Days
var d = new Date();
d.setDate(d.getDate() + 5);

// To add Months
var m = new Date();
m.setMonth(m.getMonth() + 5);

// To add Years
var m = new Date();
m.setFullYear(m.getFullYear() + 5);
28
votes
int days = 1;
var newDate = new Date(Date.now() + days * 24*60*60*1000);

CodePen

var days = 2;
var newDate = new Date(Date.now() + days * 24*60*60*1000);

document.write('Today: <em>');
document.write(new Date());
document.write('</em><br/> New: <strong>');
document.write(newDate);
26
votes

If you can, use moment.js. JavaScript doesn't have very good native date/time methods. The following is an example Moment's syntax:

var nextWeek = moment().add(7, 'days');
alert(nextWeek);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment.js/2.17.1/moment-with-locales.min.js"></script>

Reference: http://momentjs.com/docs/#/manipulating/add/

19
votes

I created these extensions last night:
you can pass either positive or negative values;

example:

var someDate = new Date();
var expirationDate = someDate.addDays(10);
var previous = someDate.addDays(-5);


Date.prototype.addDays = function (num) {
    var value = this.valueOf();
    value += 86400000 * num;
    return new Date(value);
}

Date.prototype.addSeconds = function (num) {
    var value = this.valueOf();
    value += 1000 * num;
    return new Date(value);
}

Date.prototype.addMinutes = function (num) {
    var value = this.valueOf();
    value += 60000 * num;
    return new Date(value);
}

Date.prototype.addHours = function (num) {
    var value = this.valueOf();
    value += 3600000 * num;
    return new Date(value);
}

Date.prototype.addMonths = function (num) {
    var value = new Date(this.valueOf());

    var mo = this.getMonth();
    var yr = this.getYear();

    mo = (mo + num) % 12;
    if (0 > mo) {
        yr += (this.getMonth() + num - mo - 12) / 12;
        mo += 12;
    }
    else
        yr += ((this.getMonth() + num - mo) / 12);

    value.setMonth(mo);
    value.setYear(yr);
    return value;
}
18
votes

the simplest answer is, assuming the need is to add 1 day to the current date:

var currentDate = new Date();
var numberOfDayToAdd = 1;
currentDate.setDate(currentDate.getDate() + numberOfDayToAdd );

To explain to you, line by line, what this code does:

  1. Create the current date variable named currentDate. By default "new Date()" automatically assigns the current date to the variable.
  2. Create a variable to save the number of day(s) to add to the date (you can skip this variable and use directly the value in the third line)
  3. Change the value of Date (because Date is the number of the month's day saved in the object) by giving the same value + the number you want. The switch to the next month will be automatic
18
votes

The simplest approach that I have implemented is to use Date() itself. `

const days = 15; 
// Date.now() gives the epoch date value (in milliseconds) of current date 
nextDate = new Date( Date.now() + days * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000)

`

17
votes

A solution designed for the pipeline operator:

const addDays = days => date => {
  const result = new Date(date);

  result.setDate(result.getDate() + days);

  return result;
};

Usage:

// Without the pipeline operator...
addDays(7)(new Date());

// And with the pipeline operator...
new Date() |> addDays(7);

If you need more functionality, I suggest looking into the date-fns library.

15
votes

Without using the second variable, you can replace 7 with your next x days:

let d=new Date(new Date().getTime() + (7 * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000));
14
votes

to substract 30 days use (24h=86400000ms)

new Date(+yourDate - 30 *86400000)

var yourDate=new Date();
var d = new Date(+yourDate - 30 *86400000) 

console.log(d)
13
votes

The simplest solution.

 Date.prototype.addDays = function(days) {
   this.setDate(this.getDate() + parseInt(days));
   return this;
 };

 // and then call

 var newDate = new Date().addDays(2); //+2 days
 console.log(newDate);

 // or

 var newDate1 = new Date().addDays(-2); //-2 days
 console.log(newDate1);
11
votes

Late to the party, but if you use jQuery then there's an excellent plugin called Moment:

http://momentjs.com/

var myDateOfNowPlusThreeDays = moment().add(3, "days").toDate();

http://momentjs.com/docs/#/manipulating/

And lots of other good stuff in there!

Edit: jQuery reference removed thanks to aikeru's comment

11
votes

You can use JavaScript, no jQuery required:

var someDate = new Date();
var numberOfDaysToAdd = 6;
someDate.setDate(someDate.getDate() + numberOfDaysToAdd); 
Formatting to dd/mm/yyyy :

var dd = someDate.getDate();
var mm = someDate.getMonth() + 1;
var y = someDate.getFullYear();

var someFormattedDate = dd + '/'+ mm + '/'+ y;
10
votes

Thanks Jason for your answer that works as expected, here is a mix from your code and the handy format of AnthonyWJones :

Date.prototype.addDays = function(days){
    var ms = new Date().getTime() + (86400000 * days);
    var added = new Date(ms);
    return added;
}
10
votes

Old I know, but sometimes I like this:

function addDays(days) {
    return new Date(Date.now() + 864e5 * days);
}
10
votes

As simple as this:

new Date((new Date()).getTime() + (60*60*24*1000));
9
votes

Why so complicated?

Let's assume you store the number of days to add in a variable called days_to_add.

Then this short one should do it:

calc_date = new Date(Date.now() +(days_to_add * 86400000));

With Date.now() you get the actual unix timestamp as milliseconds and then you add as many milliseconds as you want to add days to. One day is 24h60min60s*1000ms = 86400000 ms or 864E5.

8
votes

No, javascript has no a built in function, but you can use a simple line of code

timeObject.setDate(timeObject.getDate() + countOfDays);
8
votes

I had issues with daylight savings time with the proposed solution.

By using getUTCDate / setUTCDate instead, I solved my issue.

// Curried, so that I can create helper functions like `add1Day`
const addDays = num => date => {
  // Make a working copy so we don't mutate the supplied date.
  const d = new Date(date);

  d.setUTCDate(d.getUTCDate() + num);

  return d;
}
8
votes

Generic prototype with no variables, it applies on an existing Date value:

Date.prototype.addDays = function (days) {
    return new Date(this.valueOf() + days * 864e5);
}
7
votes

The mozilla docs for setDate() don't indicate that it will handle end of month scenarios. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date

setDate()

  • Sets the day of the month (1-31) for a specified date according to local time.

That is why I use setTime() when I need to add days.

7
votes

I guess I'll give an answer as well:
Personally, I like to attempt to avoid gratuitous variable declaration, method calls, and constructor calls, as they are all expensive on performance. (within reason, of course)
I was going to leave this as just comment under the Answer given by @AnthonyWJones but thought better of it.

// Prototype usage...
Date.prototype.addDays = Date.prototype.addDays || function( days ) {
    return this.setTime( 864E5 * days + this.valueOf() ) && this;
};

// Namespace usage...
namespace.addDaysToDate = function( date, days ) {
    return date.setTime( 864E5 * days + date.valueOf() ) && date;
};

// Basic Function declaration...
function addDaysToDate( date, days ) {
    return date.setTime( 864E5 * days + date.valueOf() ) && date;
};

The above will respect DST. Meaning if you add a number of days that cross DST, the displayed time (hour) will change to reflect that.
Example:
Nov 2, 2014 02:00 was the end of DST.

var dt = new Date( 2014, 10, 1, 10, 30, 0 );
console.log( dt );                  // Sat Nov 01 2014 10:30:00
console.log( dt.addDays( 10 ) );    // Tue Nov 11 2014 09:30:00

If you're looking to retain the time across DST (so 10:30 will still be 10:30)...

// Prototype usage...
Date.prototype.addDays = Date.prototype.addDays || function( days ) {
    return this.setDate( this.getDate() + days ) && this;
};

// Namespace usage...
namespace.addDaysToDate = function( date, days ) {
    return date.setDate( date.getDate() + days ) && date;
};

// Basic Function declaration...
function addDaysToDate( date, days ) {
    return date.setDate( date.getDate() + days ) && date;
};

So, now you have...

var dt = new Date( 2014, 10, 1, 10, 30, 0 );
console.log( dt );                  // Sat Nov 01 2014 10:30:00
console.log( dt.addDays( 10 ) );    // Tue Nov 11 2014 10:30:00
5
votes

I use something like:

new Date(dateObject.getTime() + amountOfDays * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000)

Works with day saving time:

new Date(new Date(2014, 2, 29, 20, 0, 0).getTime() + 1 * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000)

Works with new year:

new Date(new Date(2014, 11, 31, 20, 0, 0).getTime() + 1 * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000)

It can be parametrized:

function DateAdd(source, amount, step) {
  var factor = 1;
  if (step == "day") factor = 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000;
  else if (step == "hour") factor = 60 * 60 * 1000;
  ...
  new Date(source.getTime() + amount * factor);
}
5
votes

Extending prototype in javascript may not be a good idea, especially in professional codebases.

What you want to do is extend the native Date class:

class MyCustomDate extends Date {

  addDays(days) {
    const date = new MyCustomDate(this.valueOf());
    date.setDate(date.getDate() + days);
    return date;
  }
  
}

const today = new MyCustomDate();

const nextWeek = today.addDays(7)

console.log(nextWeek)

This way, if one day Javascript implements a native addDays method, you won't break anything.