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- Timezone Converter
Timezone Converter
Convert times between any timezones instantly
Convert Time
Result
A timezone converter translates times between different world timezones, accounting for UTC offsets and daylight saving adjustments. For anyone working with international teams, scheduling meetings, or coordinating across borders, it is an everyday essential tool.
According to Buffer's 2024 State of Remote Work report, 67% of remote workers collaborate with colleagues in different timezones. GitLab's annual survey found that timezone differences are the #1 challenge cited by distributed teams, ahead of communication and isolation.
The complexity goes beyond simple math. Daylight saving time (DST) rules differ by country and change over time. The US and Europe switch on different dates, meaning the offset between New York and London shifts four times per year. India and China don't observe DST at all. And some zones use half-hour offsets (India at UTC+5:30) or even quarter-hour offsets (Nepal at UTC+5:45).
This converter uses your browser's built-in Intl API, which relies on the IANA timezone database — the same authoritative source used by operating systems, servers, and programming languages worldwide. It automatically handles DST transitions for the current date.
How to Use This Generator
- Set your time: Enter the time you want to convert. It defaults to the current time.
- Choose source timezone: Select the timezone the time is currently in (auto-detected from your browser).
- Choose target timezone: Select the timezone you want to convert to.
- Read the result: The converted time appears instantly, along with the date if it crosses midnight.
Pro Tips
- Include the timezone in invites: Always specify the timezone when sharing times. "3 PM ET" is clear. "3 PM" is ambiguous. Even better: include a timezone converter link.
- Use UTC for logs and APIs: Store and transmit times in UTC. Convert to local time only for display. This prevents DST bugs and timezone confusion in your data.
- Watch for DST transitions: The US and Europe switch on different dates. For about 3 weeks each spring and fall, the offset between them changes. Double-check during transition periods.
- Find overlap hours: For recurring meetings, find hours that fall within business time for all participants. Usually 2-3 hours of overlap exist even for US-Asia teams.