Go Unix Timestamp Guide
Go's time package provides a clean API for working with Unix timestamps. The time.Now().Unix() method returns the current timestamp in seconds, while time.Unix() creates a Time value from a Unix timestamp. Go's approach to time handling emphasizes explicit timezone management.
Unix timestamps are a universal way to represent a specific moment in time as a single integer, counting the seconds elapsed since January 1, 1970 (the Unix epoch). Working with timestamps in Go is a common task for developers building applications that log events, schedule jobs, compare dates, or communicate with APIs. The examples below cover the three most essential operations: retrieving the current timestamp, converting a timestamp into a human-readable date, and converting a date back into a timestamp.
Get Current Timestamp
The most common starting point is to capture the current moment as a Unix timestamp. In Go, you can obtain the number of seconds (or milliseconds) since the epoch using built-in functions. This value is useful for recording when an event occurred, setting cache expiry times, or generating time-based identifiers.
Get Current Unix Timestamp
package main
import (
"fmt"
"time"
)
func main() {
// Get current Unix timestamp
timestamp := time.Now().Unix()
fmt.Println(timestamp) // e.g., 1706745600
}Convert Timestamp to Date
Once you have a Unix timestamp, you often need to display it in a human-readable format. Converting a raw integer like 1706745600 into a formatted date string such as "2024-02-01 00:00:00" makes it meaningful to end users. The following Go code demonstrates how to perform this conversion with proper timezone handling.
Convert to Date
package main
import (
"fmt"
"time"
)
func main() {
// Convert Unix timestamp to time.Time
timestamp := int64(1706745600)
t := time.Unix(timestamp, 0)
fmt.Println(t.Format(time.RFC3339))
// 2024-02-01T00:00:00Z
}Convert Date to Timestamp
The reverse operation is equally important. When users provide a date through a form or when your application reads dates from a file, you need to convert them into Unix timestamps for storage, comparison, or transmission via APIs. Here is how to convert a date or date string into a Unix timestamp in Go.
Convert to Timestamp
package main
import (
"fmt"
"time"
)
func main() {
// Convert time.Time to Unix timestamp
t := time.Date(2024, 2, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, time.UTC)
timestamp := t.Unix()
fmt.Println(timestamp) // 1706745600
}Common Pitfalls in Go
Working with timestamps can be error-prone, especially across different platforms and timezone configurations. Being aware of these common mistakes will help you write more robust Go code and avoid subtle bugs that are difficult to trace in production.
- 1time.Now() uses the local timezone — use time.Now().UTC() for UTC timestamps
- 2Go's reference time for formatting is 'Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 MST 2006' — not strftime-style
- 3time.Unix(sec, nsec) takes nanoseconds as the second parameter, not milliseconds
- 4time.Parse() requires a layout string using the reference time, not format specifiers
Best Practices for Timestamp Handling
Regardless of the programming language, following a few best practices will keep your timestamp code reliable. Always store and transmit timestamps in UTC to avoid timezone ambiguity. Use seconds-based Unix timestamps unless your application requires sub-second precision, in which case milliseconds or microseconds are appropriate. When displaying dates to users, convert from UTC to their local timezone only at the presentation layer. Document whether your APIs expect seconds or milliseconds, as mixing the two is one of the most frequent sources of timestamp bugs.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Timestamp Guides for Other Languages
Need Unix timestamp examples for a different programming language? Browse our complete collection of language-specific guides with copy-paste code snippets.