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Working with a global team and need to see the time in multiple cities at a glance?

Display clocks for multiple time zones side by side.

World Clock

View current time across multiple cities and time zones worldwide

Understanding Time Zones

Time zones are regions of the Earth that observe a uniform standard time for legal, commercial, and social purposes. The world is divided into 24 primary time zones, each offset from Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) by a whole number of hours. Time zones exist because the Earth rotates on its axis, meaning different locations experience daylight and darkness at different times.

Daylight Saving Time

Daylight Saving Time (DST) shifts clocks forward by one hour during summer months in many regions. This adds complexity to time zone calculations, as not all countries observe DST and those that do often change on different dates. This world clock automatically accounts for DST using your browser’s built-in timezone database.

Common Mistakes

  • Assuming all countries use whole-hour offsets — India uses UTC+5:30, Nepal uses UTC+5:45
  • Forgetting that some regions don't observe Daylight Saving Time at all
  • Confusing UTC with GMT — UTC is a time standard, GMT is a time zone

Pro Tips

  • Use UTC when scheduling international meetings to avoid time zone confusion
  • Add cities in your team's time zones to quickly check availability
  • Remember that the International Date Line can make some time zones seem counterintuitive

Real-World Examples

Remote team meeting

Schedule across New York (EST), London (GMT), and Tokyo (JST) by checking overlapping work hours

Travel planning

Track departure and arrival times across time zones to avoid jet lag surprises

Global deadline

Set a UTC-based deadline so every participant knows exactly when it expires locally

🇺🇸

New York

EDT

12:10:59

Sat, Apr 25

Day
🇬🇧

London

GMT+1

17:10:59

Sat, Apr 25

Day
🇫🇷

Paris

GMT+2

18:10:59

Sat, Apr 25

Day
🇯🇵

Tokyo

GMT+9

01:10:59

Sun, Apr 26

Night
🇦🇺

Sydney

GMT+10

02:10:59

Sun, Apr 26

Night
🇦🇪

Dubai

GMT+4

20:10:59

Sat, Apr 25

Night
🇮🇳

Mumbai

GMT+5:30

21:40:59

Sat, Apr 25

Night
🇺🇸

Los Angeles

PDT

09:10:59

Sat, Apr 25

Day

Click “Add City” to display more time zones. Times update every second using your browser’s Intl.DateTimeFormat API with IANA timezone data.

On this page

About World Clock

What are Time Zones?

Time zones are regions of the Earth that observe a uniform standard time for legal, commercial, and social purposes. They generally follow the boundaries of countries and their subdivisions rather than strictly following longitude, though they are roughly based on lines of longitude (each time zone covers approximately 15 degrees). The world is divided into 24 primary time zones, each offset from Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) by a whole number of hours.

Time zones exist because the Earth rotates on its axis, meaning different parts of the world experience daylight and darkness at different times. Before time zones were established in the 19th century, each city used local solar time, which caused significant confusion for railways and telegraph communications. The introduction of standard time zones revolutionized scheduling and coordination across long distances.

Major Time Zones Around the World

UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is the primary time standard by which the world regulates clocks and time. Major time zones include EST (UTC-5, Eastern Standard Time) covering the US East Coast, PST (UTC-8, Pacific Standard Time) for the US West Coast, CET (UTC+1, Central European Time) for much of Europe, and JST (UTC+9, Japan Standard Time) for Japan and Korea.

Some countries use half-hour or even quarter-hour offsets. India uses UTC+5:30, Nepal uses UTC+5:45, and parts of Australia use UTC+9:30 and UTC+10:30. Daylight Saving Time (DST) adds further complexity by shifting some regions forward by one hour during summer months. This world clock automatically accounts for DST and all timezone offsets using your browser’s built-in timezone database.

This utility is provided for informational purposes only. KnowKit is not responsible for any errors in the output.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does this world clock account for Daylight Saving Time?

Yes. The clock uses your browser's built-in Intl.DateTimeFormat API with IANA timezone data, which automatically handles Daylight Saving Time transitions for all supported time zones.

How accurate is the time displayed?

The clock updates every second and uses your system's clock as the source. Accuracy depends on your device's time settings. For critical timing, ensure your device's clock is synchronized with an NTP server.

Can I add custom cities or time zones?

The tool provides 19 predefined cities covering all major world time zones. If your city is not listed, choose one in the same time zone for an equivalent display.

Why do some countries use half-hour offsets?

Some countries like India (UTC+5:30) and Nepal (UTC+5:45) use offsets that don't align with whole hours to better match their geographic position relative to the prime meridian.