Date.prototype.toDateString()
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. Itās been available across browsers since āØJuly 2015ā©.
The toDateString() method of Date instances returns a string representing the date portion of this date interpreted in the local timezone.
Try it
const event = new Date(1993, 6, 28, 14, 39, 7);
console.log(event.toString());
// Expected output: "Wed Jul 28 1993 14:39:07 GMT+0200 (CEST)"
// Note: your timezone may vary
console.log(event.toDateString());
// Expected output: "Wed Jul 28 1993"
Syntax
js
toDateString()
Parameters
None.
Return value
A string representing the date portion of the given date (see description for the format). Returns "Invalid Date" if the date is invalid.
Description
Date instances refer to a specific point in time. toDateString() interprets the date in the local timezone and formats the date part in English. It always uses the following format, separated by spaces:
- First three letters of the week day name
- First three letters of the month name
- Two-digit day of the month, padded on the left a zero if necessary
- Four-digit year (at least), padded on the left with zeros if necessary. May have a negative sign
For example: "Thu Jan 01 1970".
- If you only want to get the time part, use
toTimeString(). - If you want to get both the date and time, use
toString(). - If you want to make the date interpreted as UTC instead of local timezone, use
toUTCString(). - If you want to format the date in a more user-friendly format (e.g., localization), use
toLocaleDateString().
Examples
>Using toDateString()
js
const d = new Date(0);
console.log(d.toString()); // "Thu Jan 01 1970 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
console.log(d.toDateString()); // "Thu Jan 01 1970"
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScriptĀ® 2026 LanguageĀ Specification> # sec-date.prototype.todatestring> |