This document explains the Excel DAYS360 function, which calculates the number of days between two dates using the 30/360 day count convention followed by many financial institutions. The 30/360 method treats all months as having 30 days and ignores leap years. The DAYS360 function simplifies date calculations for financial models by standardizing the counting of days regardless of the actual number of days in a month or year. The function syntax is =DAYS360(START_DATE, END_DATE, [METHOD]), where START_DATE and END_DATE are the dates between which days are counted. An example calculates the number of days between the author's date of birth and the current date.
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Excel DAYS360 Function
This document explains the Excel DAYS360 function, which calculates the number of days between two dates using the 30/360 day count convention followed by many financial institutions. The 30/360 method treats all months as having 30 days and ignores leap years. The DAYS360 function simplifies date calculations for financial models by standardizing the counting of days regardless of the actual number of days in a month or year. The function syntax is =DAYS360(START_DATE, END_DATE, [METHOD]), where START_DATE and END_DATE are the dates between which days are counted. An example calculates the number of days between the author's date of birth and the current date.
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EXCEL DAYS360 FUNCTION
30/360 DAYS COUNT CONVENTION
By Nooruddin Surani Introduction • The Gregorian calendar is the internationally accepted civil calendar. But due to different number of days in different No. Name Days months makes it difficult to 1 January 31 2 February 28 or 29 work on financial calculations 3 March 31 using Gregorian calendar 4 April 30 5 May 31 • While working on Financial 6 June 30 Models it is easy to deal 7 July 31 8 August 31 with 30/360 days year 9 September 30 as most of the financial, 10 October 31 11 November 30 corporate & municipal 12 December 31 institutions follow the same Gregorian calendar. (2010, March 16). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15:25, March 19, 2010, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gregorian_calendar&oldid=350173459 Working with 30/360 Days with Excel • In Excel it is very easy to work with 30/360 Days Count Convention • Syntax: =DAYS360(START_DATE, END_DATE, [METHOD]) • Where START_DATE is the first date and END_DATE is the last date of the period Example 1 • My date of birth is 7-Dec-1973 today’s date is 19-Mar-2010, follow the example to understand the same. Conclusion • You can use Excel’s DAYS360 function to calculate difference in two dates • This function will eliminate the confusion with Gregorian Calendar regarding different number of days in different months, even different number of days in leap years • Syntax: =DAYS360(START_DATE, END_DATE, [METHOD]) • Where START_DATE is the first date and END_DATE is the last date of the period References • Gregorian calendar. (2010, March 16). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15:25, March 19, 2010, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php? title=Gregorian_calendar&oldid=350173459