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Time zones (UTC offsets)
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Hover a time zone block or the map for details
How to use the map

    UTC offsets change by place and date

    A world time zone map is useful for seeing the broad offset pattern, but exact scheduling should still use a city or IANA time zone. Regions that observe daylight saving time can move between offsets during the year.

    Use city names for real meetings

    Short labels such as EST, CST, IST, or BST can be ambiguous. When a meeting, flight, release, or deadline matters, include the city name, calendar date, and local time so recipients can verify the same moment.

    Compare the map with live clocks

    The map helps you orient across regions, while city pages and converters provide the date-aware local time. Combining both views reduces mistakes around midnight, weekends, and daylight-saving transition weeks.

    Plan from a rough offset to an exact time

    Use the colored bands to understand whether a region is broadly ahead of or behind your own location, then move to a date-aware tool before sending invitations. A single offset can cover many cities with different business hours, holidays, and daylight-saving rules.

    Read boundaries as guidance, not legal advice

    Time zone borders and daylight-saving decisions are set by governments and can change. The map is built for planning context, so important travel, broadcast, support, or finance deadlines should be checked against official local sources as well.

    Keep remote work fair across regions

    When a team spans North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific, the best meeting time may still be inconvenient for someone. Use the map to explain the tradeoff visually, rotate painful meeting slots, and keep routine updates async when overlap is limited.

    Move from boundaries to real schedules

    The map is a strong first step when you need geographic context, but exact event planning should move to a city clock or converter. A border can show the broad zone, while a city-based calculation can account for daylight saving, local exceptions, and date changes around midnight.

    Use the map before route planning

    For calls, flights, webinars, and support handoffs, start by checking which side of the world each audience sits on. Then compare the final cities with a time difference route or working-hours tool so the published time is usable, not just mathematically correct.

    Review data and corrections

    Time zone boundaries and local clock rules can change. TheWorldTimeMap keeps tool guidance separate from ads and provides data notes, editorial standards, and feedback paths so visitors can report stale labels, confusing offsets, or city coverage gaps.