Add 30 Business Days to Any Date

Enter any start date and add 30 business days to get the exact result date. Weekends are excluded automatically. Note: 30 business days ≠ Net 30 — it is approximately 6 calendar weeks.

Add 30 business days
Remember: 30 business days ≈ 6 calendar weeks, not 1 month. For Net 30 invoice terms (30 calendar days), use the Invoice Due Date Calculator instead.

Find the date that is exactly N business days from today or any start date — weekends excluded automatically. Works for delivery windows, SLA deadlines, and payment due dates.

Delivery deadlinesSLA targetsPayment due datesNotice periodsContract milestones
Example: Start 1 Oct · +10 business days → 15 Oct · +14 business days → 21 Oct (weekends skipped)

After calculating, copy the result into your workflow instead of searching for the calculator again.

Workflow-ready after calculation

Calculate first, then reuse the result

After you calculate, UtilityPilot can turn the result into a clean note you can paste into your SOP, spreadsheet, CRM, Slack, Notion, checklist or email.

Plain-English result — paste into any tool

For internal process notes

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For Notion, docs or wikis

Share the tool without your values

No sign-up · No stored inputs · Copied text does not include your entered values

Formula

End Date = Start Date + N weekdays (skip Saturday & Sunday)

Starting from the chosen date, the calculator advances one day at a time, counting only Monday to Friday until N working days have been added. The start date itself is not counted as day 1.

Worked Example

Scenario 1 — 10 business days from today:

A shipment is dispatched on Monday 6 October. The courier quotes a 10 business day delivery window.

Start: Mon 6 Oct • +10 business days

Skip: Sat 11 / Sun 12 Oct • Skip: Sat 18 / Sun 19 Oct

Result: Wednesday 22 October

Scenario 2 — 2 business days from Thursday:

A support ticket is raised on Thursday. The SLA requires a 2-business-day response.

Start: Thursday • Day 1: Friday • Day 2: Monday (weekend skipped)

Deadline: Monday

Starting on Friday? Day 1 = Monday, Day 2 = Tuesday — the weekend consumes both intervening days.

Scenario 3 — Net 14 business days invoice:

An invoice is issued on Wednesday 1 October. Payment terms are Net 14 business days.

14 weekdays from Wed 1 Oct = Tuesday 21 October

Two weekends (4/5 Oct and 11/12 Oct) are skipped automatically.

Common Mistakes

  • Treating the start date as day 1. It is day 0. The first business day counted is the next weekday after your start date.
  • Mixing up business days and calendar days. Net 30 calendar days is faster than Net 30 business days (which equals roughly 6 weeks).
  • Not accounting for bank holidays. This tool skips weekends only. A result landing on a public holiday may not be a valid working day.

Guide

How to Use

  1. 1

    Enter the start date

    The date from which you want to count forward. This date is not counted as day 1.

  2. 2

    Enter the number of business days

    Type the number of working days to add — for example, 14 for a two-week turnaround.

  3. 3

    Click Find Date

    The tool jumps forward the exact number of Mon–Fri days.

  4. 4

    Read and copy the result

    The full date is shown. Use the copy button to share it.

Next Steps

What to do next

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Worked example

+30 business days from Monday 2 June

30 weekdays forward = 6 full Mon–Fri working weeks

6 weekends skipped = 12 calendar days added

Total calendar days: approximately 42

Result: approximately Monday 14 July

Exact date depends on start day — use the calculator above.

30 business days vs Net 30

Net 30 (calendar days)

30 calendar days from invoice. Approximately 4.3 weeks. Standard for most B2B invoices.

+30 business days

30 Mon–Fri days. Approximately 6 calendar weeks. Used in contracts explicitly specifying business day terms.

Use this in your workflow

Copy the result into your SOP, spreadsheet, CRM, Slack, Notion, email or checklist using the Copy result summary button. Your team can reference the saved note instead of recalculating.

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