Time Zone Converter
Pick a moment and a starting zone, see the same instant in every zone you care about. Uses your browser — nothing sent anywhere.
Pick a moment and a starting zone, see the same instant in every zone you care about. Uses your browser — nothing sent anywhere.
This free time-zone converter shows what time it is in another part of the world, or converts a specific time between zones. Pick the zones (and a time, if you're planning ahead) and it does the offset for you. Useful for scheduling calls, travel and remote work across regions. No account needed.
Pick your zone and the other person's, enter your local meeting time, and read off their equivalent. The tool handles the offset — and crucially the daylight-saving rules — so you don't accidentally book an hour off.
A few zones are offset by 30 or 45 minutes (India is UTC+5:30, Nepal UTC+5:45), so differences aren't always whole hours. Daylight-saving changes also shift the gap by an hour at certain times of year.
UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is the global reference clock that every time zone is defined as an offset from. It's effectively the same wall-clock time as GMT, but UTC is the modern, precise standard used for scheduling and computing.
When a region springs forward or falls back, its offset from UTC shifts by an hour — and not every country observes it or changes on the same date. A good converter applies each zone's current rules automatically, which is why manual math so often goes wrong around March and November.
Look for the overlap in normal working hours; for big gaps (say US–Asia) that often means early morning for one side and evening for the other. Convert first, then propose a couple of options so the other side can pick the least painful slot.