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Calculate Hours Between Two

Dates and Times in Excel


by GREGORY on DECEMBER 10, 2010
Recently I was asked how to calculate the number of hours between two
points in time on different days. Since this was in a reader comment, I gave
a brief answer that requires a fuller account here.
Dates and Times are all part of the master plan in Excel. Once you get
the fundamentals, the rest is just icing on the cake.
A Date value in Excel looks like this: 40519
A Time value in Excel looks like this: 0.58333
Cell formatting changes how you see these numbers.
The Date: 7 Dec, 2010
The Time: 2:00 PM
Dates in Excel
When you type a Date into Excel, you may never see the underlying
number, like 40519, but its there nonetheless. This a date serial
number and it makes Date calculations easy.
You ask, Why is this such a weird-looking number? Well the Excel folks
started a numbering system with Dates. In Excel for Windows they
gave 1 Jan, 1900 the serial date number of 1, then continued numbering
until this day and beyond. So serial number 40519 represents 7 Dec, 2010.
In Excel for Mac they started numbering Dates beginning with 2 Jan,
1904. (dont ask) So the serial date 40519 represents 8 Dec, 2014.
(Actually its known as the 1904 date system. To be clear, Macs can change
Excel settings to use the 1900 date system.)
Time in Excel
When you type 2:00 PM into a cell in Excel the underlying value is a fraction,
but Excel interprets this as a time serial number and formats the cell
accordingly.
Try typing 0.25 into a blank cell, then change the cell formatting to a TIME
format, and youll get something like 6:00 AM.
As an aside, you can calculate this fraction for any time value during the day
by taking the total number of seconds that have passed from midnight until
your time value and dividing by 86,400 seconds in a day.

Dates and Times Together
In Excel the unit of time is the Day, a key fact to know. Youll notice
that Dates are integers, and Time is a fractional number. You can add
the two together to get a Date/Time format.
So adding a Date serial number, like 40518, to a Time serial number, like
0.25, gives us 40518.25. Formatting the cell holding this value using d
mmm, yyyy h:mm AM/PM will show6 Dec, 2010 6:00 AM.
You can also enter something like 7 Dec, 2010 2:00 PM into a cell and Excel
will recognize this as a Date/Time format. However, if you change the cell
formatting to General, the underlying number is 40519.05833.
So hopefully by now you can see that subtracting two Date/Time formatted
numbers can be done mathematically. Subtracting 6 Dec, 2010 6:00 AM
from 7 Dec, 2010 2:00 PM is done by Excel underneath the hood as
40519.05833 40518.25 and the result is 1.3333.
Calculating Hours Between 2 Dates and Times
If we recall that the unit of time is the Day, this value represents 1-1/3
days of time. Since there are 24 hours in a day, converting to hours is a
simple multiplication 24 * 1.3333 = or 32 hours. (24 * 4/3 to be more
precise)
Finding the number of hours between two date/times is simple,
just subtract the start date/time from the end date/time and
multiply the result by 24 hours.
If you want to enter the dates and times separately (which is loads easier
than typing in a date/time in one cell) then add the date/times together.
Hours = ((End_Date+End_Time)-(Start_Date+Start_Time))*24
Heres a look at a typical worksheet designed to calculate the hours between
two dates.

As you can see, the formula for Hours, in cell F2, shows in the formula bar.
And row 3 containsGeneral formatting so you can view the date/time
serial numbers for row 2.
Change the formatting for cells B2:E2 to match what you normally use for
Date and Time data entry.

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