How many days are in one week?
One week contains exactly 7 days.
Convert Week (wk) to Day (day) instantly.
Formula
value × 7
| Sample | Converted |
|---|---|
| 1 wk | 7 day |
| 5 wk | 35 day |
| 10 wk | 70 day |
| 100 wk | 700 day |
| 1,000 wk | 7,000 day |
Convert weeks to days by multiplying by 7. This gives a clear day count for weekly plans, deadlines, retention periods, and schedules that need to be expressed in daily terms.
Weeks are compact, but days are often easier to apply when a timeline needs a practical count.
The conversion is direct: each week contributes seven days to the final value.
A four-week plan becomes 28 days, which can be easier to use for countdowns, checklists, or day-based reminders.
This conversion is useful when a policy or note is written in weeks but a form, report, or schedule needs days.
Do not use this as a business-day calculator unless every day in the week is meant to count.
For calendar deadlines, convert the duration first, then apply the resulting day count to the actual start date.
A weekly value is easy to read, but a day count is often easier to act on.
Day values work well for countdowns, deadlines, reminders, retention periods, and step-by-step plans.
Converting weeks to days gives a practical duration without changing the underlying timeline.
A two-week review period is 14 days.
A twelve-week program is 84 days.
Writing both values can help readers understand the timeline quickly and still work with exact day-based instructions.
This page counts full elapsed days.
It does not skip weekends, holidays, or non-working days.
If the task depends on business days, apply the calendar rule separately after deciding what should count.
Definition: A week is a time unit equal to seven days.
History/Origin: Weeks are used for recurring planning, schedules, reporting periods, subscriptions, and long-duration summaries.
Current use: week is used in project plans, learning programs, staffing cycles, maintenance intervals, reporting, and subscriptions.
Definition: A day is used here as a fixed elapsed-time unit equal to 24 hours.
History/Origin: Days are used for deadlines, travel periods, waiting times, service windows, and practical schedule planning.
Current use: day is used for countdowns, retention rules, timelines, booking periods, operations, travel, and elapsed-time reporting.
| Week [wk] | Day [day] |
|---|---|
| 0.01 wk | 0.07 day |
| 0.1 wk | 0.7 day |
| 1 wk | 7 day |
| 2 wk | 14 day |
| 5 wk | 35 day |
| 10 wk | 70 day |
| 20 wk | 140 day |
| 50 wk | 350 day |
| 100 wk | 700 day |
1 wk = 7 day
1 day = 0.142857 wk
Formula: value × 7
Example: 15 wk = 105 day
Precision note: Use exactly 7 days per elapsed week. Decimal day results can appear when the week input includes fractions.
One week contains exactly 7 days.
6 weeks is 42 days.
No. It counts all elapsed days in a seven-day week, including weekends.