Date.prototype.setUTCMinutes()
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The setUTCMinutes() method of Date instances changes the minutes for this date according to universal time.
Try it
const date = new Date("December 31, 1975, 23:15:30 GMT+11:00");
console.log(date.getUTCMinutes());
// Expected output: 15
date.setUTCMinutes(25);
console.log(date.getUTCMinutes());
// Expected output: 25
Syntax
setUTCMinutes(minutesValue)
setUTCMinutes(minutesValue, secondsValue)
setUTCMinutes(minutesValue, secondsValue, msValue)
Parameters
minutesValue-
An integer between 0 and 59 representing the minutes.
secondsValueOptional-
An integer between 0 and 59 representing the seconds. If you specify
secondsValue, you must also specifyminutesValue. msValueOptional-
An integer between 0 and 999 representing the milliseconds. If you specify
msValue, you must also specifyminutesValueandsecondsValue.
Return value
Changes the Date object in place, and returns its new timestamp. If a parameter is NaN (or other values that get coerced to NaN, such as undefined), the date is set to Invalid Date and NaN is returned.
Description
If you do not specify the secondsValue and
msValue parameters, the values returned from
getUTCSeconds() and
getUTCMilliseconds() methods are
used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range,
setUTCMinutes() attempts to update the date information in the
Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 100 for
secondsValue, the minutes will be incremented by 1
(minutesValue + 1), and 40 will be used for seconds.
Examples
>Using setUTCMinutes()
const theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setUTCMinutes(43);
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification> # sec-date.prototype.setutcminutes> |
Browser compatibility
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