Time Zone Converter
Convert any time between two time zones. Results update instantly.
How to Use the Time Zone Converter
Select a date and time in the source field, then choose source and target time zones from the dropdowns. The converted time, UTC offsets, and time difference appear instantly. A DST badge appears when Daylight Saving Time is in effect for either zone on the selected date.
Understanding UTC Offsets
Every time zone is defined by its offset from Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), the world's primary time standard. UTC+0 is the baseline. New York in winter is UTC-5 (Eastern Standard Time), meaning clocks there are five hours behind UTC. Tokyo is UTC+9 (Japan Standard Time), nine hours ahead. When you convert a time, you subtract the source offset and add the target offset to find the equivalent moment.
Some offsets are not whole hours. India Standard Time (IST) sits at UTC+5:30, and Nepal Standard Time is UTC+5:45. This tool handles all fractional offsets supported by the browser's Intl API.
Daylight Saving Time (DST)
Daylight Saving Time advances clocks by one hour during summer months to shift an extra hour of daylight into the evening. In the United States, DST begins on the second Sunday in March and ends on the first Sunday in November. Most of Europe observes Summer Time from the last Sunday in March to the last Sunday in October.
Not all regions observe DST. Japan, China, India, most of the Middle East, and the majority of the Southern Hemisphere near the equator keep a fixed UTC offset year-round. When DST applies to a zone on the selected date, this calculator shows a DST badge next to the offset so you always know which offset is in effect.
How the Calculation Works
This converter uses the browser-native Intl.DateTimeFormat API, which embeds the full IANA timezone database. No external libraries are loaded. Given a date-time string, the browser resolves the correct UTC offset for that exact moment in the specified timezone, including historical DST transitions. The target time is computed by formatting the same underlying UTC timestamp in the target timezone.
Common Time Zone Conversions
Business calls between New York (EST, UTC-5) and London (GMT, UTC+0) require a five-hour difference in winter and a four-hour difference in spring/autumn because the US and Europe switch DST on different weekends. A meeting at 3 PM EST becomes 8 PM GMT. Calls from New York to Tokyo (JST, UTC+9) span fourteen hours in winter: 9 AM EST is 11 PM JST the same day.
For teams spanning the US West Coast (PST, UTC-8) and Central Europe (CET, UTC+1), the overlap is nine hours. A window of 8 AM to 11 AM PST corresponds to 5 PM to 8 PM CET, which is a practical meeting slot for both sides.
Aviation and Military Time
Aviation and the military use UTC (Zulu time) as the universal reference to avoid ambiguity. Flight schedules, weather reports, and NOTAM notices are all issued in UTC. A departure at 1400Z means 14:00 UTC regardless of where the aircraft is. This converter lets you translate Zulu times into any local timezone for situational awareness.
Quick Reference: Common Zones
The quick-select buttons at the top of the calculator cover the most frequently searched zones: Eastern Standard/Daylight Time (EST/EDT, America/New_York), Central Standard/Daylight Time (CST/CDT, America/Chicago), Pacific Standard/Daylight Time (PST/PDT, America/Los_Angeles), UTC, GMT (Etc/GMT), Central European Time/Summer Time (CET/CEST, Europe/Paris), Japan Standard Time (JST, Asia/Tokyo, always UTC+9), and India Standard Time (IST, Asia/Kolkata, always UTC+5:30). Both dropdowns also contain hundreds of IANA names grouped by region for less common zones.