DateTime.ToString()

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shorthand format strings

dates

d 2/22/2026
D Sunday, February 22, 2026
m February 22
M February 22
y February 2026
Y February 2026

times

t 3:35 PM
T 3:35:10 PM

combos

f Sunday, February 22, 2026 3:35 PM
F Sunday, February 22, 2026 3:35:10 PM
g 2/22/2026 3:35 PM
G 2/22/2026 3:35:10 PM
o 2026-02-22T15:35:10.4051309
r Sun, 22 Feb 2026 15:35:10 GMT
s 2026-02-22T15:35:10
u 2026-02-22 15:35:10Z
U Sunday, February 22, 2026 3:35:10 PM

custom date bits

era

%g AD
gg AD

year

yyyyy 02026
yyyy 2026
yyyy 2026
yy 26
y February 2026

month

MMMM February
MMM Feb
MM 02
%M 2

day

dddd Sunday
ddd Sun
dd 22
%d 22

custom time bits

hour

HH 15
%H 15
hh 03
%h 3

minute

mm 35
%m 35

second

ss 10
%s 10

subsecond

%f 4
ff 40
fff 405
ffff 4055
fffff 40554
ffffff 405543
fffffff 4055438

miscellaneous bits

date separator

%/ /

time separator

%: :

AM/PM

%t P
tt PM

time zone1

%K
%z +0
zz +00
zzz +00:00

Pitfalls and traps

General advice

Dates, times, and time zones are tricky. In .NET, there are subtle differences that can be challenging to spot. My general advice is:

Other gotchas

TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime(...) returns a DateTime with Kind = Unspecified. For example:

DateTime dt = DateTime.UtcNow;
// dt.ToString("o") -> 2026-02-22T20:35:10.4054919Z
// dt.Kind -> Utc

TimeZoneInfo tz = TimeZoneInfo.FindSystemTimeZoneById("America/Chicago");
var sf = TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime(d, tz);
// sf.ToString("o") -> 2026-02-22T14:35:10.4054919
// sf.Kind -> Unspecified

Note that the Unspecified time lacks a time zone offset in the output. You might be tempted to set its Kind to Local, but this is usually not a good idea:

// don't do this
var sfLocal = DateTime.SpecifyKind(sf, DateTimeKind.Local);
sfLocal.ToString("o") -> 2026-02-22T14:35:10.4054919+00:00

The time is correct, but the time zone offset is not. Chicago is -06:00, not +00:00. "Local" in this context is the server's time zone (-00:00).

1That undesired time zone also shows up in the related format strings %K, %z, zz, and zzz above. Again, these show the time zone of the server, not the time zone the value was converted to. Luckily, DateTimeOffset handles this better:

var dto = DateTimeOffset.UtcNow;
var chicagoDto = TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime(dto, tz);
// dto.ToString("zzz")        --> +00:00
// chicagoDto.ToString("zzz") --> -06:00

Other surprising things

The Ticks property is not agnostic of time zones/kind:

DateTime utc = DateTime.UtcNow;
DateTime local = utc.ToLocalTime(); // don't do this
DateTime unspecified = TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime(utc, tz);

// utc.Ticks         --> 639073893104055328
// local.Ticks       --> 639073893104055328
// unspecified.Ticks --> 639073677104055328

I guess it makes sense that Ticks would vary here, but I personally would have guessed that it was always in UTC, sort of like Javascript's getTime.

And DateTimeOffset works in the same spirit by factoring in the offset:

// these are the same for DateTimeOffset, but not DateTime
// dto.Ticks        --> 639073893104055301
// chicagoDto.Ticks --> 639073677104055301
//
// and the difference is the same as the time zone offset ✔️:
// (chicagoDto.Ticks - dto.Ticks) / TimeSpan.TicksPerHour --> -6