# Convert Seconds To Date Object Let's say you have an integer that represents the number of seconds since the unix epoch. This is a reasonably common way for systems to represent a date. For example, `1713350171` is an _Expiration Date_ I just got from an API. But how do we know what date that actually represents and how can we get a JavaScript `Date` object from that value? The `new Date()` constructor can produce a date object given an integer. That integer is not supposed to be seconds since the unix epoch though. See what we get here: ```javascript > new Date(1713350171) 1970-01-20T19:55:50.171Z ``` Something is off. The integer that you pass to `new Date()` needs to be the _number of milliseconds_ since the unix epoch. We can get there by multiplying our _seconds_ value by `1000`. ```javascript > new Date(1713350171 * 1000) 2024-04-17T10:36:11.000Z ``` Not only can we, as humans, read that date, but we have a `Date` object that we can use within our program. Note: if you execute `Date.now()`, the value you get is in milliseconds.