<time>

Baseline Widely available

This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since September 2015.

The <time> CSS data type represents a time value expressed in seconds or milliseconds. It is used in animation, transition, and related properties.

Syntax

The <time> data type consists of a <number> followed by one of the units listed below. Optionally, it may be preceded by a single + or - sign. As with all dimensions, there is no space between the unit literal and the number.

Note: Although the number 0 is always the same regardless of unit, the unit may not be omitted. In other words, 0 is invalid and does not represent 0s or 0ms.

Units

s

Represents a time in seconds. Examples: 0s, 1.5s, -60s.

ms

Represents a time in milliseconds. Examples: 0ms, 150.25ms, -60000ms.

Note: Conversion between s and ms follows the logical 1s = 1000ms.

Examples

Valid times

12s         Positive integer
-456ms      Negative integer
4.3ms       Non-integer
14mS        The unit is case-insensitive, although capital letters are not recommended.
+0s         Zero with a leading + and a unit
-0ms        Zero with a leading - and a unit

Invalid times

0           Although unitless zero is allowed for <length>s, it's invalid for <time>s.
12.0        This is a <number>, not a <time>, because it's missing a unit.
7 ms        No space is allowed between the number and the unit.

Specifications

Specification
CSS Values and Units Module Level 4
# time

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also