Get Current Date and Time in Java

Learn to get the current date and/or time in Java. Note that the appropriate way to handle date-time information is different before and after JDK 8.

  • For JDK 8 or later, the recommended way is to use LocalDate and LocalTime classes.
  • For JDK 7 or earlier, we can use of Date and Calendar classes only.

1. Get Current Date and Time (Java 8 or Later)

1.1. Core Classes

In Java 8 or later, the date and time information is represented by the following classes. These classes provide the current date and time locally to the user, and there is no timezone information is associated with it.

  • java.time.LocalDate – Represents the Date only information in yyyy-MM-dd pattern.
  • java.time.LocalTime – Represents the Time only information in HH:mm:ss.SSSSSSSSS pattern.
  • java.time.LocalDateTime – Represents the Date and Time informations, both, without any timezone information. The pattern is the combination of local date and time information.

To get the current date and time information in another timezone/locale, we can use the following classes.

1.2. Code Examples

The following code shows how to get the current date-time information using the now() method in each class. The now() method returns an immutable and thread-safe instance of the class for which it is invoked.

// Get current date
LocalDate today = LocalDate.now();
System.out.println(today);   //2022-02-15

// Get current time
LocalTime now = LocalTime.now();
System.out.println(now);   //12:43:51.519251200

// Get current date and time
LocalDateTime instance = LocalDateTime.now();
System.out.println(instance);   //2022-02-15T12:43:51.519251200

To get the timezone-specific date and time information, pass the zone information in the ZonedDateTime.now() method.

// Get current date and time in GMT
ZonedDateTime tzInstance = ZonedDateTime.now(ZoneId.of("GMT"));
System.out.println(tzInstance);  //2022-02-15T07:13:51.519251200Z[GMT]

1.3. Display Formatted Date and Time

To default string representations of the above classes are fixed. If we want to display the information in some custom pattern, we can use DateTimeFormatter class.

LocalDateTime instance = LocalDateTime.now();

DateTimeFormatter formatter
	= DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("dd-MM-yyyy hh:mm");

String formattedString = formatter.format(instance); //15-02-2022 12:43

2. Get Current Date and Time (Java 7 or Earlier)

2.1. Core Classes

Till version 7 or earlier, Java didn’t have separate classes for the date and time parts. The main classes were :

  • java.util.Date
  • java.util.Calendar

2.2. Code Examples

Let us have a quick look at the methods used for getting the current date and time information in legacy Java classes.

Date date = new Date();
System.out.println(date);	//Tue Feb 15 13:00:31 IST 2022

Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
System.out.println(cal);  

2.3. Display Formatted Date and Time

To display, the date-time in a custom formatted manner, we should use SimpleDateFormat class.

Date date = new Date();
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();

SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("dd-MM-yyyy hh:mm");

System.out.println(sdf.format(date));  //15-02-2022 01:04
System.out.println(sdf.format(cal.getTime()));  //15-02-2022 01:04

Happy Learning !!

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