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Military Time Converter

Convert between 12-hour AM/PM and 24-hour military time. Essential for correct medication documentation. Free nursing calculator for military time converter. AU a...

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Patient's medication chart has '1430' on one entry and '2:30 pm' on another. You need both in the same format before documenting the administration time.

Military Time Converter
Time
Midnight=0000 · 6AM=0600 · Noon=1200 · 1PM=1300 · 6PM=1800 · 11PM=2300 PM→24h: add 1200 (except 12PM=1200, 12AM=0000)
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Converts between 12-hour (AM/PM) and 24-hour (military) time in both directions. Essential for accurate medication documentation, handover communication, shift scheduling and interpreting entries from clinical systems that use 24-hour format.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

12-hour → 24-hour: AM hours: same (12 AM = 0000) PM hours: add 12 (except 12 PM = 1200) Midnight: 12:00 AM = 0000 · Noon: 12:00 PM = 1200 24-hour → 12-hour: reverse the above

24-hour (military) time eliminates AM/PM ambiguity in clinical documentation — a critical safety benefit given that medication errors involving 'midnight' and 'noon' confusion, and 'daily' drugs given at the wrong time of day, are recurring themes in medication incident reports. Australian nursing documentation standards recommend 24-hour time for all medication administration records.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Afternoon to 24-hour
Given: 2:30 PM → 24-hour
Working: 2 + 12 = 14 → 1430
Answer: 1430
💡 PM hours after 12: add 12. Write without colon in medication documentation.
Standard
Midnight — common confusion point
Given: 12:00 AM (midnight) → 24-hour
Working: 12 AM = start of new day = 0000
Answer: 0000
💡 ⚠️ Most confusing conversion. Midnight = 0000. The minute after midnight = 0001.
Advanced
24-hour back to 12-hour
Given: 0315 → 12-hour
Working: 03 hours < 12, so AM. 0315 → 3:15 AM
Answer: 3:15 AM
💡 Hours 0000–1159 are all AM. Hours 1200–2359 are all PM. 1200 = 12:00 PM noon exactly.

4 Sanity check

Noon confusion
12:00 PM (noon) = 1200 NOT 0000
12 PM = 1200 is the most common single error. 12 AM = 0000 (midnight).
1 AM through 12:59 PM
0100 through 1259
Morning hours add a zero prefix: 1 AM = 0100, 9 AM = 0900.
1 PM through 11:59 PM
1300 through 2359
PM hours 1–11: add 12. 3 PM = 1500, 11:30 PM = 2330.
Medication documentation
Always use 24-hour format in medication charts
'2 pm' on a drug chart is ambiguous and not acceptable in most Australian facilities.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Treating 12:00 PM as 0000 Thinking 'twelve' = midnight Noon medication recorded as midnight — 12-hour documentation error 12 PM = 1200 (noon) and 12 AM = 0000 (midnight). These are the two that catch everyone.
Writing colon in medication chart time Habit from 12-hour format Minor documentation inconsistency, but some eMR systems parse incorrectly Standard clinical 24-hour format is four digits without colon: 1430 not 14:30
Forgetting zero prefix for morning hours Writing 9 instead of 0900 Ambiguous documentation — could be confused with other entries Always use four digits: 0100, 0230, 0900 — never 1, 2:30 or 9
Confusing the next day's 0000 Night shift documentation errors Medication recorded on wrong date When charting at exactly midnight, confirm the new day's date on the medication chart before documenting 0000