Central European Time to UTC

CET To UTC Converter

CET is one hour ahead of UTC during standard time. Subtract one hour from CET to get UTC during standard time. That shortcut is useful for quick reading, but exact scheduling is safer when you use city-based time zones and the actual calendar date.

Quick conversion

Subtract one hour from CET to get UTC during standard time. The examples below are designed for the standard-time labels people commonly type into search. If the event is in daylight-saving time, the visible labels may be CEST to UTC instead, even when the practical local-time relationship looks similar.

For future meetings, webinars, customer calls, interviews, product launches, or support handoffs, use the Time Zone Converter or Time Difference Calculator with the exact date. That lets the browser apply local daylight-saving rules instead of relying on a fixed offset copied from memory.

CET to UTC examples

These examples assume standard-time labels. Use a date-aware tool when the event is in the future or when the audience may be using daylight time.

CET UTC Typical use
9:00 AM CET08:00 UTCGood for global release notes.
1:00 PM CET12:00 UTCCommon for webinars and support handoffs.
5:00 PM CET16:00 UTCLate Europe workday, useful for logs.
9:00 PM CET20:00 UTCLate for routine Europe meetings.

Use labels carefully

CET and UTC are short labels. They are convenient in emails and landing pages, but short labels can be seasonal, ambiguous, or too vague for software. A page might say CET because that is what people search for, while the local clock on the event date may use another daylight-saving label.

For precise scheduling, use Europe/Paris and Etc/UTC. These place-based identifiers help calendars and browsers apply the correct offset for the selected date, including daylight-saving changes where they apply.

Best planning workflow

Start with the local time in the source region, choose the actual date, and then convert it for the target region. If the time will be published publicly, include both local times and the city names so readers do not need to guess from abbreviations alone.

For recurring events, check several future dates. The first meeting may be correct while a later meeting shifts because one region changes clocks and another does not. This is especially important for customer support coverage, remote work schedules, webinars, and product launch timelines.

For meetings

Write both local times in the invite. A clear invite says the source time, target time, date, and city-based zones. That is more reliable than asking people to translate a short label during a busy workday.

For launches and webinars

Registration pages, reminder emails, livestream captions, and social posts should be checked with a date-aware converter before publishing. A one-hour daylight-saving mistake can make a launch look careless.

For support teams

Support handoffs, incident runbooks, and on-call schedules should name both the city and the local time. During urgent work, people should not have to guess whether a short label means standard time, daylight time, or simply current local time.

Berlin to UTC

Open a date-aware route or calculator for this comparison.

Time Zone Converter

Convert one event time into multiple local times.

Time Difference Calculator

Compare two places on the exact date.

Abbreviation Guide

Understand EST, PST, CST, UTC, GMT, IST, and more.

US Time Zones

Compare Eastern, Central, Mountain, Pacific, Alaska, and Hawaii time.

Meeting Planner

Find fair meeting windows across multiple regions.

CET to UTC FAQ

What is the fastest way to convert CET to UTC?

Subtract one hour from CET to get UTC during standard time. For anything scheduled on a future date, use a city-based converter so daylight-saving rules are applied correctly.

Why do search results mention daylight time?

Many people search for standard-time labels even when the current local label is daylight time. The calendar date determines whether the short label should be CET, UTC, or a daylight-saving version such as CEST to UTC.

What should I put in a calendar invite?

Use the local date, both local times, and the IANA zones Europe/Paris and Etc/UTC. That gives people and calendar software enough context to show the right time.

Data and editorial notes

The live clocks on this page use browser-supported IANA time zones such as Europe/Paris and Etc/UTC through Intl.DateTimeFormat. The written examples explain common standard-time labels that people search for, but the exact result for a meeting should always be checked with the calendar date.

See Time Zone Data And Accuracy for how offsets and daylight-saving changes are handled, Editorial Policy for how guide pages are reviewed, or Feedback to report a correction.

Data accuracy explains IANA time zone sources, offset limitations, daylight-saving changes, and correction handling.

Editorial policy describes review standards and keeps conversion guidance separate from advertising.

Feedback is the path for reporting stale labels, offset mistakes, or unclear conversion examples.

Privacy policy explains advertising, consent, analytics, cookies, and local browser storage.