Timezone Time Converter

Convert a local time from one timezone into another. Defaults to GMT / UTC.

Convert time
How to use this tool

Enter the date and time you have, select the timezone that time belongs to, then choose the timezone you want to convert into.

Use the swap button when you want to reverse the direction. Use current time to quickly compare the time right now across zones.

Example

If a meeting is scheduled for 9:00 AM GMT, select 9:00 AM with GMT / UTC as the source timezone, then choose Eastern Time to see the matching local time for New York or Toronto.

Frequently asked questions

timezone converter

How the timezone time converter helps

Use the timezone time converter to compare meeting times, publishing schedules, support windows, launch plans, travel calls, and remote team coordination across regions. Timezones are easy to misread because local offsets can change with daylight saving rules and regional policies.

Utility Tally tools are built for quick, practical workflows: prepare the input, review the result, copy or download the output, and move on without creating an account. The guidance below explains how to use this page responsibly, what the result means, and which related tools or guides can help with the next step.

For best results, start with sample or non-sensitive data when you are learning a tool, then move to real work only after you understand the output. If the result will be sent to a client, imported into software, printed, published, or used in a security-related workflow, take an extra minute to verify formatting, totals, links, spelling, privacy, and destination requirements.

How to use it
  1. Enter the source date, time, and timezone.
  2. Choose one or more target timezones to compare.
  3. Review the converted local times carefully, especially around midnight.
  4. Share the timezone name with the time so recipients know the reference point.
  5. Double-check critical meetings close to daylight saving transitions.
How it works

The converter treats the source date and time as a local time in the selected timezone, converts that moment to UTC internally, and then displays the same instant in other timezones. Named timezones are safer than fixed offsets because they account for daylight saving rules.

The result should be treated as a working output, not a substitute for professional review where tax, security, accessibility, legal, accounting, or production data requirements apply. Check the destination system, final format, and any local rules before relying on the result.

Practical tips

Include the day of week when scheduling across timezones because the date can change.

Avoid saying only "EST" or "PST" when daylight saving may apply; use city-based timezone names when possible.

For global meetings, include a calendar invite so each attendee sees local time.

Check morning and evening boundaries for teams spread across continents.

Timezone Time Converter FAQ