How to get UTC time in Python?

I've search a bunch on StackExchange for a solution but nothing does quite what I need. In JavaScript, I'm using the following to calculate UTC time since Jan 1st 1970:

function UtcNow() {
    var now = new Date();
    var utc = Date.UTC(now.getUTCFullYear(), now.getUTCMonth(), now.getUTCDate(), now.getUTCHours(), now.getUTCMinutes(), now.getUTCSeconds(), now.getUTCMilliseconds());
    return utc;
}

What would be the equivalent Python code?


Try this code that uses datetime.utcnow():

from datetime import datetime
datetime.utcnow()

For your purposes when you need to calculate an amount of time spent between two dates all that you need is to substract end and start dates. The results of such substraction is a timedelta object.

From the python docs:

class datetime.timedelta([days[, seconds[, microseconds[, milliseconds[, minutes[, hours[, weeks]]]]]]])

And this means that by default you can get any of the fields mentioned in it's definition - days, seconds, microseconds, milliseconds, minutes, hours, weeks. Also timedelta instance has total_seconds() method that:

Return the total number of seconds contained in the duration. Equivalent to (td.microseconds + (td.seconds + td.days * 24 * 3600) * 10*6) / 10*6 computed with true division enabled.


Simple, standard library only. Gives timezone-aware datetime, unlike datetime.utcnow().

from datetime import datetime,timezone
now_utc = datetime.now(timezone.utc)

In the form closest to your original:

import datetime

def UtcNow():
    now = datetime.datetime.utcnow()
    return now

If you need to know the number of seconds from 1970-01-01 rather than a native Python datetime, use this instead:

return (now - datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1)).total_seconds()

Python has naming conventions that are at odds with what you might be used to in Javascript, see PEP 8. Also, a function that simply returns the result of another function is rather silly; if it's just a matter of making it more accessible, you can create another name for a function by simply assigning it. The first example above could be replaced with:

utc_now = datetime.datetime.utcnow

import datetime
import pytz

# datetime object with timezone awareness:
datetime.datetime.now(tz=pytz.utc)

# seconds from epoch:
datetime.datetime.now(tz=pytz.utc).timestamp() 

# ms from epoch:
int(datetime.datetime.now(tz=pytz.utc).timestamp() * 1000)