How To Convert Days to Weeks
Formula: weeks = days ÷ 7
Example: Convert 30 days to weeks. 30 ÷ 7 = 4.2857142857 weeks.
To convert by hand, take your number of days and divide it by 7.
This works because a standard week has 7 days.
If you want a quick check, 14 days is exactly 2 weeks, so every extra 7 days adds 1 more week.
Quick Answer
1 day = 0.1428571429 weeks
- 7 days = 1 week
- 14 days = 2 weeks
- 30 days = 4.2857142857 weeks
Conversion Formula
Recommended (IAU standard): weeks = days / 7 So: 1 day = 1/7 week = 0.1428571429 week
This formula means you are splitting the total days into groups of 7. Each full group of 7 days is 1 week. Any leftover days become a decimal part of a week.
- Write down the number of days.
- Divide that number by 7.
- The result is the number of weeks.
- Round only if you need a shorter number for display.
Day
A day is a unit of time equal to 24 hours, used in everyday calendars and clocks.
The idea comes from Earth’s rotation, and it has been used for thousands of years in many early calendars. The common symbol is d.
- Planning trips and travel dates
- School schedules and homework deadlines
- Shipping and delivery estimates
- Medical schedules, like “take for 7 days”
- Project timelines and task due dates
Week
A week is a unit of time equal to 7 days, widely used for calendars, work schedules, and planning.
The 7 day week has roots in ancient cultures and astronomy, and it became standard in many modern calendars. The common symbol is wk.
- Work and pay periods
- Fitness plans and training cycles
- Pregnancy and baby development tracking
- Event planning, like “in 3 weeks”
- Academic terms and weekly class timetables
Is this Conversion of Days To Weeks Accurate?
Yes. This conversion is exact in standard civil time because 1 week is defined as 7 days. Our team uses the same fixed relationship used in calendars, textbooks, and ISO style date systems, so the result is reliable for daily planning, study, and professional use.
If you want to learn how we choose and verify standard unit relationships, see our notes here: accuracy standards.
Real Life Examples
Here are practical examples of converting days into weeks, the same way you might see it in real schedules.
- Two week notice: If you must give 14 days notice, that is 14 ÷ 7 = 2 weeks.
- Monthly planning: A 30 day plan is 30 ÷ 7 = 4.2857142857 weeks, which is 4 full weeks plus 2 extra days.
- Workout program: A 45 day program is 45 ÷ 7 = 6.4285714286 weeks, so it lasts a bit more than 6 weeks.
- School break: A 21 day break is 21 ÷ 7 = 3 weeks, exactly.
- Shipping window: A delivery estimate of 10 days is 10 ÷ 7 = 1.4285714286 weeks, which is about 1 week and 3 days.
- Subscription trial: A 15 day free trial is 15 ÷ 7 = 2.1428571429 weeks, meaning 2 weeks plus 1 extra day.
- Yearly view: 365 days is 365 ÷ 7 = 52.1428571429 weeks, so a non leap year is a little more than 52 weeks.
Quick Tips
- Remember the anchor fact: 7 days = 1 week.
- Divide by 7 for weeks, multiply by 7 for days.
- For fast estimates, treat 7 as close to 7 and round at the end.
- Use full weeks first, then convert leftover days to a decimal by leftover ÷ 7.
- For schedules, it is often clearer to say “X weeks and Y days” instead of a long decimal.
- Keep more decimal places only when you truly need precision.