Chinese Date Formats Explained
Learn how to write and say dates in simplified Chinese: 日期格式 rìqī géshì.
Chinese dates look wonderfully logical once you stop expecting them to behave like English dates. English loves chaos: month first here, day first there, slashes everywhere, and everyone pretends it is normal.
In simplified Chinese, the usual pattern is big to small: year, month, day. That means you usually move from the largest time unit to the smallest one. Once that clicks, reading and writing dates gets much easier.
Yak Tip
If you remember one thing, make it this: Chinese date order is usually 年 nián → 月 yuè → 日 rì / 号 hào. Big to small. Neat, clean, no drama.
The Basic Chinese Date Pattern
The most common full date format in Chinese is:
年 nián + 月 yuè + 日 rì / 号 hào
So a date like 2026年3月9日 becomes:
2026年3月9日
èr líng èr liù nián sān yuè jiǔ rì
March 9, 2026
You can think of it as “2026 year, 3 month, 9 day.” Clunky in English, perfectly normal in Chinese.
| Part | Chinese | Pinyin | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year | 年 | nián | year |
| Month | 月 | yuè | month |
| Day | 日 / 号 | rì / hào | day |
How To Write The Year In Chinese
Years in Chinese are usually read digit by digit, not as one giant number chunk.
2024年
èr líng èr sì nián
the year 2024
1998年
yī jiǔ jiǔ bā nián
the year 1998
2001年
èr líng líng yī nián
the year 2001
Notice that 0 is read as 零 líng.
| Year | Pinyin | English |
|---|---|---|
| 2020年 | èr líng èr líng nián | 2020 |
| 2011年 | èr líng yī yī nián | 2011 |
| 1987年 | yī jiǔ bā qī nián | 1987 |
| 2008年 | èr líng líng bā nián | 2008 |
How To Write The Month In Chinese
Months are refreshingly easy. Chinese usually uses the number of the month plus 月 yuè.
一月
yī yuè
January
三月
sān yuè
March
十二月
shí èr yuè
December
Examples:
- 五月
wǔ yuè
May - 八月
bā yuè
August - 十一月
shí yī yuè
November
How To Write The Day In Chinese
For the day of the month, Chinese commonly uses 日 rì or 号 hào.
Both can mean “day of the month,” but there is a small usage difference:
- 日 rì is more formal and common in writing.
- 号 hào is very common in everyday speech.
Examples:
- 1日
yī rì
the 1st - 1号
yī hào
the 1st - 15日
shí wǔ rì
the 15th - 23号
èr shí sān hào
the 23rd
In a formal written date, you will often see:
2025年10月1日
èr líng èr wǔ nián shí yuè yī rì
October 1, 2025
In conversation, you might hear:
十月一号
shí yuè yī hào
October 1st
Chinese Date Order Vs English Date Order
This is where many beginners accidentally create tiny calendar disasters.
| Language | Common Order | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Chinese | Year → Month → Day | 2026年3月9日 èr líng èr liù nián sān yuè jiǔ rì |
| American English | Month → Day → Year | March 9, 2026 |
| British English | Day → Month → Year | 9 March 2026 |
So when you see 2026年3月9日, do not try to shuffle it into an English order in your head before understanding it. Just read it as written: year, month, day.
Common Chinese Date Formats You Will Actually See
Not every date appears in the exact same outfit. Here are the most common versions.
| Format | Pinyin | Meaning | Where You See It |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026年3月9日 | èr líng èr liù nián sān yuè jiǔ rì | March 9, 2026 | formal writing, documents |
| 2026年3月9号 | èr líng èr liù nián sān yuè jiǔ hào | March 9, 2026 | speech, casual writing |
| 3月9日 | sān yuè jiǔ rì | March 9 | when the year is obvious |
| 3月9号 | sān yuè jiǔ hào | March 9 | casual speech |
| 2026/03/09 | èr líng èr liù nián líng sān yuè líng jiǔ rì | 2026/03/09 | digital forms, systems |
| 2026-03-09 | èr líng èr liù nián líng sān yuè líng jiǔ rì | 2026-03-09 | computers, databases, tickets |
When dates are written with slashes or hyphens, Chinese readers still understand them through the same year-month-day logic. The punctuation changes; the structure does not.
How To Say Today, Tomorrow, And Yesterday With Dates
Real life rarely stops at calendar formatting. People also combine dates with everyday time words.
| Hanzi | Pinyin | Meaning | Example (ZH) | Example (Pinyin) | Translation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 今天 | jīntiān | today | 今天是三月九号。 | Jīntiān shì sān yuè jiǔ hào. | Today is March 9th. |
| 明天 | míngtiān | tomorrow | 明天是三月十号。 | Míngtiān shì sān yuè shí hào. | Tomorrow is March 10th. |
| 昨天 | zuótiān | yesterday | 昨天是三月八号。 | Zuótiān shì sān yuè bā hào. | Yesterday was March 8th. |
| 生日 | shēngrì | birthday | 我的生日是六月二号。 | Wǒ de shēngrì shì liù yuè èr hào. | My birthday is June 2nd. |
| 日期 | rìqī | date | 请写一下日期。 | Qǐng xiě yí xià rìqī. | Please write the date. |
Useful Real-Life Date Sentences
These are the kinds of lines you will hear in class, at work, on delivery forms, and in everyday conversation.
- 今天是2026年3月9日。
Jīntiān shì èr líng èr liù nián sān yuè jiǔ rì.
Today is March 9, 2026. - 我的生日是七月二十号。
Wǒ de shēngrì shì qī yuè èr shí hào.
My birthday is July 20th. - 会议在四月五号。
Huìyì zài sì yuè wǔ hào.
The meeting is on April 5th. - 请问今天几月几号?
Qǐngwèn jīntiān jǐ yuè jǐ hào?
May I ask what today’s date is? - 今天是十二月一号。
Jīntiān shì shí èr yuè yī hào.
Today is December 1st. - 我八月十五号回北京。
Wǒ bā yuè shí wǔ hào huí Běijīng.
I’m going back to Beijing on August 15th. - 考试是2027年1月6日。
Kǎoshì shì èr líng èr qī nián yī yuè liù rì.
The exam is on January 6, 2027. - 你的生日是几月几号?
Nǐ de shēngrì shì jǐ yuè jǐ hào?
What day is your birthday? - 合同日期写错了。
Hétóng rìqī xiě cuò le.
The contract date was written incorrectly. - 我们十月三号出发。
Wǒmen shí yuè sān hào chūfā.
We leave on October 3rd.
Special Date Words Worth Knowing
A few date-related words show up all the time, so they are worth learning early.
| Hanzi | Pinyin | Meaning | Example (ZH) | Example (Pinyin) | Translation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 今年 | jīnnián | this year | 今年是2026年。 | Jīnnián shì èr líng èr liù nián. | This year is 2026. |
| 明年 | míngnián | next year | 明年是2027年。 | Míngnián shì èr líng èr qī nián. | Next year is 2027. |
| 去年 | qùnián | last year | 去年是2025年。 | Qùnián shì èr líng èr wǔ nián. | Last year was 2025. |
| 本月 | běnyuè | this month | 本月活动很多。 | Běnyuè huódòng hěn duō. | There are many activities this month. |
| 月底 | yuèdǐ | end of the month | 我们月底交报告。 | Wǒmen yuèdǐ jiāo bàogào. | We hand in the report at the end of the month. |
| 月初 | yuèchū | beginning of the month | 他月初很忙。 | Tā yuèchū hěn máng. | He is very busy at the beginning of the month. |
Common Mistakes And Easy Fixes
- Mistake: Writing the month first because English does.
Fix: Use 年 nián → 月 yuè → 日 rì / 号 hào. - Mistake: Reading the year as one full number chunk.
Fix: Read each digit separately, like 2024年 = èr líng èr sì nián. - Mistake: Forgetting 月 yuè and 日 rì / 号 hào.
Fix: Add the time unit word after the number. - Mistake: Thinking 日 rì and 号 hào are totally different things.
Fix: They both mark the day of the month; 日 rì is more formal, 号 hào is more conversational. - Mistake: Panicking when you see 2026-03-09.
Fix: It is still year-month-day. The dashes are not trying to trick you. Probably.
Practice Section
Try these before peeking at the answers.
Turn These Into Chinese
- April 2, 2026
- November 18th
- My birthday is May 7th.
- What is today’s date?
Answers
- 2026年4月2日
èr líng èr liù nián sì yuè èr rì
April 2, 2026 - 11月18号
shí yī yuè shí bā hào
November 18th - 我的生日是五月七号。
Wǒ de shēngrì shì wǔ yuè qī hào.
My birthday is May 7th. - 今天几月几号?
Jīntiān jǐ yuè jǐ hào?
What is today’s date?
Quick Reference Summary
- 日期 — rìqī — date
- 年 — nián — year
- 月 — yuè — month
- 日 — rì — formal “day”
- 号 — hào — everyday spoken “day”
- Standard order: 年 nián → 月 yuè → 日 rì / 号 hào
- Years are read digit by digit: 2026年 = èr líng èr liù nián
- Months are number + 月 yuè
- Days are number + 日 rì or 号 hào
Final Yak Box
Chinese date formats are one of those rare language topics that are actually nicer than English. The system is orderly, predictable, and not trying to start an argument in a group chat. Learn the pattern once, and a lot of calendars, forms, and messages suddenly stop looking scary.





