How to read 1000
In military time you drop the colon: 1000 means 10 hundred 00. Because the hour is below 12, it stays morning — that gives 10:00 AM (AM).
Explained with a live converter, reference tables, charts, and a step-by-step guide.
1000 in military time is 10:00 AM in standard 12-hour time.
In military time you drop the colon: 1000 means 10 hundred 00. Because the hour is below 12, it stays morning — that gives 10:00 AM (AM).
Standard time splits the day into two halves: AM (Latin ante meridiem, before noon) runs from midnight until just before 12 noon. PM (post meridiem, after noon) runs from 12 noon until just before midnight.
The two tricky cases: midnight is 12:00 AM (not PM) and noon is 12:00 PM (not AM). Military time avoids this entirely — 0000 and 1200 are unambiguous.
| Military time | Standard time |
|---|---|
| 0000 | 12:00 AM |
| 0100 | 1:00 AM |
| 0200 | 2:00 AM |
| 0300 | 3:00 AM |
| 0400 | 4:00 AM |
| 0500 | 5:00 AM |
| 0600 | 6:00 AM |
| 0700 | 7:00 AM |
| 0800 | 8:00 AM |
| 0900 | 9:00 AM |
| 1000 | 10:00 AM |
| 1100 | 11:00 AM |
| 1200 | 12:00 PM |
| 1300 | 1:00 PM |
| 1400 | 2:00 PM |
| 1500 | 3:00 PM |
| 1600 | 4:00 PM |
| 1700 | 5:00 PM |
| 1800 | 6:00 PM |
| 1900 | 7:00 PM |
| 2000 | 8:00 PM |
| 2100 | 9:00 PM |
| 2200 | 10:00 PM |
| 2300 | 11:00 PM |
Common decimal hours and their equivalent in hours and minutes — handy for timesheets.
| Decimal hours | Hours & minutes |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 0h 6m |
| 0.25 | 0h 15m |
| 0.33 | 0h 20m |
| 0.5 | 0h 30m |
| 0.66 | 0h 40m |
| 0.75 | 0h 45m |
| 0.9 | 0h 54m |
| 1 | 1h 0m |
| 1.25 | 1h 15m |
| 1.5 | 1h 30m |
| 1.75 | 1h 45m |
| 2 | 2h 0m |
| 7.5 | 7h 30m |
| 7.75 | 7h 45m |
| 8 | 8h 0m |
A time format only decides how a moment is written — not when it happens. Military time, standard time, Unix timestamps, and decimal time are different notations for the same information.
Converting between them is therefore exact and never changes. The only rounding is in decimal time, where seconds are rounded to whole minutes.
Military time is used by the military, aviation, hospitals, and emergency services because it is unambiguous. Unix timestamps live in databases, log files, and APIs. Decimal time appears on timesheets and in payroll.
1000 in military time is 10:00 AM in standard 12-hour time.
Drop the colon and read the digits: 1000 means 10 hundred hours — that is 10:00 AM in the 12-hour format. From 1300 onward, subtract 12 from the hour to get the afternoon (PM) time.
1000 is in the morning, so it is AM. Military time has no AM/PM — every hour from 00 to 23 is unambiguous.
Yes. Converting between time formats is a pure notation change — the same moment, just written differently. There is no rounding except minute-rounding for decimal time.
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The time format converter covers military time, Unix timestamps, and decimal time with tables and charts.