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Timezone Converter

Compare current time across multiple cities. Add locations, see local date and time with timezone, and share a link with your selection.

Add locations

Search and add at least one city above to compare times.

What is a timezone converter?

A timezone converter is a tool that shows the same moment in time in different places around the world. When it is 9:00 in London, what time is it in Tokyo, New York, or Sydney? Because the Earth is divided into time zones—roughly one per 15° of longitude—the clock time and even the calendar date differ from one city to the next. A timezone converter answers that in one view: you pick a reference time and see the equivalent local time (and date) for every city you add.

This free world time converter and world clock lets you add as many cities as you need, adjust the reference moment with a 15-minute step slider, and share a link so colleagues, clients, or friends see the same comparison without recalculating. Use it as a time difference calculator to find the exact gap between two cities, or simply compare time zones before scheduling a meeting or booking a flight.

When to use a timezone converter

Converting between time zones is useful whenever people or events span more than one region. Common situations include:

  • Scheduling meetings across offices or with remote team members. For example, finding a slot when it is morning in New York and afternoon in London, and still reasonable in Berlin.
  • Planning trips: knowing local time at your destination for flights, check-in times, and when to call home.
  • Coordinating with distributed teams: knowing when colleagues are in working hours, lunch, or off so you know when to expect replies or schedule calls.
  • Setting customer support hours or knowing when a team in another country is available.
  • Staying in touch with family abroad: choosing a good time to call so it is not too early or too late for them.

Example timezone conversions

London, New York and Tokyo

When it is 9:00 on Monday morning in London (GMT/BST), it is 4:00 in New York (EST/EDT) and 17:00 or 18:00 in Tokyo (JST), depending on British Summer Time. So a morning meeting in London is still the previous evening in New York and late afternoon or early evening the same day in Tokyo.

Sydney and Los Angeles

Sydney is often 17–19 hours ahead of Los Angeles. When it is 10:00 Monday in Sydney, it can still be Sunday afternoon in LA. That difference is important when planning live events, releases, or support windows that need to cover both regions.

Same instant, different dates

The same moment can fall on different calendar days. When it is 23:30 on Tuesday in London, it is already 07:30 or 08:30 on Wednesday in parts of Asia. Deadlines like “end of day Tuesday” must be defined by timezone (e.g. end of day Tuesday in the contract’s governing timezone) to avoid confusion.

How do time zones work?

Time zones are based on the rotation of the Earth. The planet is divided into 24 main zones (in practice there are more because of half-hour or 15-minute offsets). Each zone is usually one hour apart from its neighbours. Times are often expressed as an offset from UTC (Coordinated Universal Time), for example UTC+1 for Paris in winter or UTC-5 for New York (Eastern Standard Time).

Many countries use daylight saving time (DST): clocks move forward by one hour in spring and back in autumn. So the same place can have different offsets at different times of the year (e.g. London is UTC+0 in winter and UTC+1 in summer). Our converter uses the correct offset for the date and time you choose, so you always see the right local time.

How to use this timezone converter

  1. Search for a city by name (type at least two letters). Select a city from the list to add it to your comparison.
  2. Add more cities to compare their local times side by side. You can include as many as you need.
  3. Use the time slider or the “Current time” button to set the reference moment. All cities update to show that instant in their own timezone. The slider moves in 15-minute steps.
  4. Use “Copy link” to share your selection. Anyone opening the link will see the same cities and the same reference time.

Tips for working across time zones

  • 1Always specify the timezone when setting deadlines or meeting times (e.g. “3 pm London time” or “15:00 UTC”) to avoid mistakes.
  • 2Use the working-hours colours on the slider to see when it is business hours in each city; green is typical working time, amber is evening, rose is typical sleep.
  • 3For recurring meetings, pick a time that rotates fairly: e.g. alternating between morning for one region and afternoon for the other, so the same team is not always meeting late at night.
  • 4When travelling, check local time a day before and set reminders for important calls or events so you do not mix up AM/PM or dates.

Frequently asked questions

Why do some cities show different dates for the same time?

Because of timezone offsets, the same instant can fall on different calendar days in different places. For example, when it is late evening on Tuesday in Europe, it can already be Wednesday morning in Asia. The converter shows the local date and time for each city, so you see exactly when it is there.

What do the coloured bars and emojis mean?

The slider bar is coloured by hour type in the first location’s timezone: green for typical working hours (e.g. 9–17), amber for non-working evening hours, and rose for typical sleeping hours. The emoji next to each city’s time shows the same for that city’s local time: working, non-working, or sleep. This helps you quickly see when it is a good time to call or schedule.

Can I share my timezone comparison?

Yes. Use the “Copy link” button below the slider. The link includes your chosen cities and the selected time. Anyone opening it will see the same comparison without having to search or set the time again.

How many cities can I add?

You can add as many cities as you need. The list grows with each search and selection. Remove individual cities with the trash icon or clear all with “Remove all” to start over.

Does the converter account for daylight saving time?

Yes. The times shown use each location’s correct offset for the date and time you select, including daylight saving time where it applies. So you always see the real local time.

What is the 15-minute step for?

The slider moves in 15-minute steps so you can quickly try different reference times (e.g. 9:00, 9:15, 9:30) without typing. Many meetings start on the hour or half-hour, so 15-minute steps cover typical scheduling needs.

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