Is the Javascript date object always one day off?

There are several crazy things that happen with a JS DATE object that convert strings, for example consider the following date you provided

Note: The following examples may or may not be ONE DAY OFF depending on YOUR timezone and current time.

new Date("2011-09-24"); // Year-Month-Day
// => Fri Sep 23 2011 17:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST) - ONE DAY OFF.

However, if we rearrange the string format to Month-Day-Year...

new Date("09-24-2011");
// => Sat Sep 24 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST) - CORRECT DATE.

Another strange one

new Date("2011-09-24");
// => Fri Sep 23 2011 17:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST) - ONE DAY OFF AS BEFORE.

new Date("2011/09/24"); // change from "-" to "/".
// => Sat Sep 24 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST) - CORRECT DATE.

We could easily change hyphens in your date "2011-09-24" when making a new date

new Date("2011-09-24".replace(/-/g, '\/')); // => "2011/09/24".
// => Sat Sep 24 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST) - CORRECT DATE.

What if we had a date string like "2011-09-24T00:00:00"

new Date("2011-09-24T00:00:00");
// => Fri Sep 23 2011 17:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST) - ONE DAY OFF.

Now change hyphen to forward slash as before; what happens?

new Date("2011/09/24T00:00:00");
// => Invalid Date.

I typically have to manage the date format 2011-09-24T00:00:00 so this is what I do.

new Date("2011-09-24T00:00:00".replace(/-/g, '\/').replace(/T.+/, ''));
// => Sat Sep 24 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST) - CORRECT DATE.

UPDATE

If you provide separate arguments to the Date constructor you can get other useful outputs as described below

Note: arguments can be of type Number or String. I'll show examples with mixed values.

Get the first month and day of a given year

new Date(2011, 0); // Normal behavior as months in this case are zero based.
// => Sat Jan 01 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST)

Get the last month and day of a year

new Date((2011 + 1), 0, 0); // The second zero roles back one day into the previous month's last day.
// => Sat Dec 31 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST)

Example of Number, String arguments. Note the month is March because zero based months again.

new Date(2011, "02"); 
// => Tue Mar 01 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST)

If we do the same thing but with a day of zero, we get something different.

new Date(2011, "02", 0); // Again the zero roles back from March to the last day of February.
// => Mon Feb 28 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST)

Adding a day of zero to any year and month argument will get the last day of the previous month. If you continue with negative numbers you can continue rolling back another day

new Date(2011, "02", -1);
// => Sun Feb 27 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (MST)

Notice that Eastern Daylight Time is -4 hours and that the hours on the date you're getting back are 20.

20h + 4h = 24h

which is midnight of 2011-09-24. The date was parsed in UTC (GMT) because you provided a date-only string without any time zone indicator. If you had given a date/time string w/o an indicator instead (new Date("2011-09-24T00:00:00")), it would have been parsed in your local timezone. (Historically there have been inconsistencies there, not least because the spec changed more than once, but modern browsers should be okay; or you can always include a timezone indicator.)

You're getting the right date, you just never specified the correct time zone.

If you need to access the date values, you can use getUTCDate() or any of the other getUTC*() functions:

var d,
  days;
d = new Date('2011-09-24');
days = ['Sun', 'Mon', 'Tues', 'Wed', 'Thurs', 'Fri', 'Sat'];
console.log(days[d.getUTCDay()]);

To normalize the date and eliminate the unwanted offset (tested here : https://jsfiddle.net/7xp1xL5m/ ):

var doo = new Date("2011-09-24");
console.log(  new Date( doo.getTime() + Math.abs(doo.getTimezoneOffset()*60000) )  );
// Output: Sat Sep 24 2011 00:00:00 GMT-0400 (Eastern Daylight Time)

This also accomplishes the same and credit to @tpartee (tested here : https://jsfiddle.net/7xp1xL5m/1/ ):

var doo = new Date("2011-09-24");
console.log( new Date( doo.getTime() - doo.getTimezoneOffset() * -60000 )  );