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Born January 1, 2000 — Hijri & All Calendars

1 Jan 2000 = 24 Ramadan 1420 AH

Gregorian
2000-01-01
Hijri (Islamic)
1420-09-24
Persian (Solar Hijri)
1378-10-11
Julian
1999-12-19
Hebrew
5760 Tevet 23

January 1, 2000 — the most globally celebrated New Year's Day in modern history — falls on the 24th of Ramadan 1420 in the Hijri calendar, deep inside the holy month of fasting. This is a notable coincidence: the Gregorian Millennium landed in the final third of Ramadan, so communities observing the fast greeted the year 2000 while still in the height of their spiritual observance. In the Persian Shamsi calendar, the same day is 11 Dey 1378.

Date & Time

Hijri Age Calculator

See your exact age in the Islamic (Hijri) and 7 other calendars at once, and convert dates into all eight.

Calculator

The calendar your entered date is written in.
Birth date
Age as of (Gregorian date; defaults to today.)
Your Hijri age
37y 1m 9d
Gregorian age: 36y 0m 0d

The Hijri date here is the tabular (calculated) calendar. The observed moon-sighting date and the Saudi Umm al-Qura date can differ by ±1 day, occasionally ±2.

Your age in every calendar

CalendarAgeTotal days
Gregorian36y 0m 0d13,149
Julian36y 0m 0d13,149
Islamic (Hijri, tabular)37y 1m 9d13,149
Hebrew36 years13,149
Persian (Jalali)36 years13,149
Indian (Saka)36 years13,149
Ethiopian36 years13,149
Chinese35 years13,149

Why your Hijri age is higher

The Islamic (Hijri) year is lunar — about 354.4 days versus the Gregorian 365.2 — so it drifts roughly 11 days earlier each year. Your Hijri age therefore counts more elapsed years than your Gregorian age, and the gap widens by about one extra year every ~33 years.

How it's calculated

Every date is reduced to a Julian Day Number (JDN), a continuous integer count of days since a fixed epoch, and every output is derived from that single pivot. The Gregorian, Julian and tabular Islamic conversions are hand-rolled from the standard algorithms (Fourmilab / US Naval Observatory): the Gregorian and Julian use the classic civil-date formulas, and the tabular Hijri uses the 30-year cycle with 11 leap years and the leap rule ((year × 11) + 14) mod 30 < 11, anchored to the epoch JDN 1948439.5 (1 Muharram AH 1 = Friday 16 July 622 CE in the Julian calendar). The Hebrew, Persian, Indian (Saka), Ethiopian and Chinese calendars are read through Intl.DateTimeFormat's ICU calendars at the civil noon of each JDN, which yields an exact year and day; the total days lived is simply the difference of the two JDNs, so it is identical across calendars. Age in years is computed by counting completed calendar-year anniversaries up to the as-of date, clamping to the last valid day when a birthday lands on a date that does not exist that year (such as 29 February). The Hijri-drift figure compares the mean tabular Hijri year (10631 ÷ 30 ≈ 354.367 days) with the mean Gregorian year (365.2425 days), a deficit of about 10.876 days per year, and reports the approximate extra Hijri years your age accumulates. "Today" is computed at local civil midnight in your time zone, after the page mounts, so the default as-of date is correct wherever you are without baking a build-time date into the page.

Sources

Reviewed by the YouCalc Team · Last reviewed

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