Timezones Converter
Convert times between world timezones
Time zone conversions are essential for scheduling international meetings, coordinating remote teams, planning travel, and understanding broadcast or event times across the globe. The world is divided into 24 primary time zones based on lines of longitude, with many countries adding half-hour or quarter-hour offsets and observing daylight saving time (DST) adjustments that shift clocks forward or backward by one hour at specific dates each year. This complexity makes manual time zone calculations error-prone, especially when DST transitions are involved. MegaCalc's timezone converter handles all major world time zones with DST awareness.
Timezones Tool
World Timezone Converter
Eastern Standard Time
02:41 PM
UTC-5
| Timezone | Current Time | Diff |
|---|---|---|
| HST | 09:41 AM | -5h |
| AKST | 10:41 AM | -4h |
| PST | 11:41 AM | -3h |
| PDT | 12:41 PM | -2h |
| MST | 12:41 PM | -2h |
| MDT | 01:41 PM | -1h |
| CST | 01:41 PM | -1h |
| CDT | 02:41 PM | +0h |
| EST | 02:41 PM | +0h |
| COT | 02:41 PM | +0h |
| PET | 02:41 PM | +0h |
| EDT | 03:41 PM | +1h |
| AST | 03:41 PM | +1h |
| CLT | 03:41 PM | +1h |
| VET | 03:41 PM | +1h |
| NST | 04:11 PM | +1.5h |
| BRT | 04:41 PM | +2h |
| ART | 04:41 PM | +2h |
| UYT | 04:41 PM | +2h |
| GMT | 07:41 PM | +5h |
| UTC | 07:41 PM | +5h |
| WET | 07:41 PM | +5h |
| CET | 08:41 PM | +6h |
| WAT | 08:41 PM | +6h |
| CEST | 09:41 PM | +7h |
| EET | 09:41 PM | +7h |
| CAT | 09:41 PM | +7h |
| EEST | 10:41 PM | +8h |
| EAT | 10:41 PM | +8h |
| MSK | 10:41 PM | +8h |
| IRST | 11:11 PM | +8.5h |
| GST | 11:41 PM | +9h |
| IST | 01:11 AM | +10.5h |
| NPT | 01:26 AM | +10.75h |
| BST | 01:41 AM | +11h |
| MMT | 02:11 AM | +11.5h |
| ICT | 02:41 AM | +12h |
| WIB | 02:41 AM | +12h |
| CST | 03:41 AM | +13h |
| SGT | 03:41 AM | +13h |
| HKT | 03:41 AM | +13h |
| PHT | 03:41 AM | +13h |
| AWST | 03:41 AM | +13h |
| JST | 04:41 AM | +14h |
| KST | 04:41 AM | +14h |
| ACST | 05:11 AM | +14.5h |
| AEST | 05:41 AM | +15h |
| NZST | 07:41 AM | +17h |
| FJT | 07:41 AM | +17h |
About Timezones Units
Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the global time standard from which all other time zones are offset. Time zones range from UTC−12:00 (Baker Island) to UTC+14:00 (Line Islands). Most time zones are whole-hour offsets from UTC, but India (UTC+5:30), Iran (UTC+3:30), Nepal (UTC+5:45), and others use half-hour or quarter-hour offsets. Daylight Saving Time (DST) is observed in many countries, typically advancing clocks one hour in spring and reversing in autumn, which temporarily changes the UTC offset for those regions.
History of Timezones Measurement
The development of timezones measurement reflects humanity's evolving needs for precision and international consistency. Early measurement systems were tied to physical artifacts, human body parts, or regional conventions, which led to a profusion of units across different cultures and industries. The metric system introduced in late 18th-century France laid the foundation for international standardization, and the formal adoption of the International System of Units (SI) in 1960 provided the modern framework for scientific and commercial measurement. Today's timezones units trace their definitions to fundamental physical constants, ensuring consistency across laboratories, industries, and international trade.
Practical Tips for Timezones Conversions
When working with timezones conversions, settle on a single unit system at the start of a project and convert all input data to that system before performing calculations. Mid-project unit changes are a common source of errors. For safety-critical work, verify conversions using two independent methods and cross-check against published references. Keep a record of unit choices and conversion factors in your working notes so others can reproduce your calculations.
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
The most common errors in timezones conversion involve mixing units from different systems without converting first, applying the wrong direction of a conversion factor, or using approximate values where precision is needed. Differences between US and UK customary units cause frequent confusion in international contexts. When converting between significantly different scales, double-check the decimal point placement and the power of ten — off-by-a-factor-of-ten errors are surprisingly common.
Professional Uses
Engineers, scientists, technicians, and tradespeople use timezones conversions daily to reconcile data from different sources, compare products and specifications across international markets, and verify that calculations are dimensionally consistent. Academic researchers rely on precise unit conversions when building on work from other institutions or countries. Regulatory compliance often requires reporting measurements in specific units, making conversion an essential routine step.
All Timezones Conversions
From Hawaii Standard Time (HST)(8 of 48 shown)
From Alaska Standard Time (AKST)(8 of 48 shown)
From Pacific Standard Time (PST)(8 of 48 shown)
From Pacific Daylight Time (PDT)(8 of 48 shown)
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between UTC and GMT?
UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) and GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) are often used interchangeably, but they are technically different. GMT is a time zone based on the solar time at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London. UTC is the modern international time standard maintained using highly precise atomic clocks. For most practical purposes they are equivalent, but UTC is the official standard used in computing, aviation, and scientific contexts.
What is Daylight Saving Time and which countries observe it?
Daylight Saving Time (DST) is the practice of setting clocks forward one hour in spring and back one hour in autumn to make better use of daylight. Most of North America, Europe, and parts of South America observe DST. Countries near the equator generally do not, as daylight hours vary little throughout the year. Japan, China, India, most of Africa, and many other countries do not observe DST. DST transitions can cause confusion for scheduled meetings and automating time-based tasks.
How do I convert EST to other time zones?
EST (Eastern Standard Time) is UTC−5:00. To convert EST to other common zones: EST + 1 hour = CST (Central), EST + 2 hours = MST (Mountain), EST + 3 hours = PST (Pacific), EST + 5 hours = UTC/GMT, EST + 6 hours = CET (Central Europe), EST + 13.5 hours = IST (India), EST + 14 hours = CST (China), EST + 15 hours = JST (Japan). During EDT (Daylight Saving Time, March–November), add one additional hour to all these offsets.