Skip to main content
Convert
1 min read
Updated March 2026

How Many Minutes in a Week

10,080 minutes in a week - Complete time conversion and calculation guide

Quick Answer

1 week = 10,080 minutes (7 days × 24 hours × 60 minutes). 1 day = 1,440 minutes. 40-hour workweek = 2,400 minutes. 1 year = 525,600 minutes.

weeks
=
1008min

Step-by-Step Guide

1

Quick Answer

1 week = 10,080 minutes. Calculation: 7 days × 24 hours × 60 minutes = 10,080 minutes.

💡That's 168 hours or 604,800 seconds in a week!
2

Breaking It Down

1 day = 1,440 minutes | 1 week = 10,080 minutes | 1 month (30 days) = 43,200 minutes | 1 year = 525,600 minutes

💡If you sleep 8 hours/day, you're awake for 6,720 minutes per week (66.7% of the week).
3

Common Time Periods

1 hour = 60 min | 1 day = 1,440 min | 1 week = 10,080 min | 1 workweek (40 hrs) = 2,400 min | 1 weekend = 2,880 min

💡A typical 9-to-5 workday is 480 minutes (8 hours).
4

Time Management Perspective

If you work 40 hours/week (2,400 min), that's 23.8% of your week. Sleep 56 hours (3,360 min) = 33.3%. Free time = ~4,320 minutes (43%).

💡Every 1% of a week = ~100 minutes. Small time investments add up!

Frequently Asked Questions

How is 10,080 minutes calculated?

7 days × 24 hours/day × 60 minutes/hour = 10,080 minutes. This is exact for any regular week.

How many minutes are in a workweek?

A standard 40-hour workweek = 2,400 minutes. A 37.5-hour workweek = 2,250 minutes. This doesn't include lunch breaks or commute time.

How many minutes in a month?

30-day month = 43,200 minutes | 31-day month = 44,640 minutes | February (28 days) = 40,320 minutes | Leap year February = 41,760 minutes.

Why is this useful to know?

Understanding time in minutes helps with detailed scheduling, billable hours, workout planning, and realizing how much time you actually have. It makes time feel more tangible than just 'a week.'

How many seconds in a week?

1 week = 604,800 seconds (10,080 minutes × 60 seconds). That's over half a million seconds!

Related Guides

🔄More from this category

Explore other topics

Was this helpful?
Share: