🌐 World Time Reference

GMT & UTC Countries — Complete World Guide

Discover which countries use GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) and UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) as their standard time zone — including those that observe them year-round versus seasonally.

⏱ Time Zone Converter 🗺 World Time Zones List
UTC+0
The Baseline Offset
~38
Distinct UTC Offsets
24
Countries at UTC+0
37
Total UTC Offsets Used

What Are GMT and UTC?

GMT — Greenwich Mean Time — is the solar mean time at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London. It was adopted as the world's prime meridian standard in 1884 and became the foundation of global timekeeping for over a century.

UTC — Coordinated Universal Time — is the modern international standard. Coordination of atomic time transmissions began on 1 January 1960; UTC was officially adopted as a standard in 1963, and the acronym "UTC" became the formal abbreviation in 1967. It is maintained by a weighted average of hundreds of atomic clocks worldwide, coordinated by the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM). While GMT is still widely used in everyday language, UTC is the scientific and technical reference used by airlines, internet protocols, financial systems, and satellite navigation.

Key fact: GMT and UTC share the same numerical offset (UTC+0 / GMT+0) and differ by less than one second at any given moment. For all practical purposes — travel, business, communication — they are interchangeable. For a deeper technical comparison, see our guide on GMT vs UTC: What's the Difference?
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GMT Origin Royal Observatory, Greenwich, London. Established as the world prime meridian in 1884 at the International Meridian Conference.
⚛️
UTC Precision Kept by ~400 atomic clocks worldwide. Accurate to within nanoseconds. The basis for all modern time standards.
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UTC+0 Countries Approx. 24 countries and territories use UTC+0 / GMT as their standard time, spanning Europe, Africa, and the Atlantic.
☀️
DST Shifts Some UTC+0 countries (e.g. UK, Ireland, Portugal) shift to UTC+1 in summer, so they are not at GMT year-round.

Countries Using GMT / UTC+0 as Standard Time

The table below lists every country and major territory that officially observes UTC+0 (GMT) as their standard (winter) time. Countries that apply Daylight Saving Time (DST) temporarily move to UTC+1 during summer months.

Country / TerritoryRegionStandard TimeDST?Summer Offset
🇬🇧 United KingdomWestern EuropeGMT / UTC+0✅ YesBST = UTC+1
🇮🇪 IrelandWestern EuropeGMT / UTC+0✅ YesIST = UTC+1
🇵🇹 Portugal (mainland)Western EuropeWET / UTC+0✅ YesWEST = UTC+1
🇮🇸 IcelandNorth AtlanticGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇫🇴 Faroe IslandsNorth AtlanticWET / UTC+0✅ YesWEST = UTC+1
🇮🇨 Canary Islands (ES)Western EuropeWET / UTC+0✅ YesWEST = UTC+1
🇸🇳 SenegalWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇬🇭 GhanaWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇨🇮 Côte d'IvoireWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇬🇳 GuineaWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇬🇼 Guinea-BissauWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇸🇱 Sierra LeoneWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇱🇷 LiberiaWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇹🇬 TogoWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇧🇯 BeninWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇧🇫 Burkina FasoWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇲🇱 MaliWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇲🇷 MauritaniaWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇬🇲 GambiaWest AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇸🇹 São Tomé & PríncipeCentral AfricaGMT / UTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round
🇲🇦 MoroccoNorth AfricaWAT / UTC+1⚠️ Ramadan onlyUTC+0 during Ramadan
🇪🇭 Western SaharaNorth AfricaWAT / UTC+1⚠️ Ramadan onlyUTC+0 during Ramadan
🇨🇻 Cape VerdeAtlantic IslandsCVT = UTC−1❌ No DSTUTC−1 year-round
🌐 UTC / Zulu (at sea)InternationalUTC+0❌ No DSTUTC+0 year-round

🟡 Gold badge = UTC+0 observed year-round (no Daylight Saving). ⚪ White badge = standard time UTC+0, but DST applies in summer. ⚠️ Morocco & Western Sahara: standard time is UTC+1; revert to UTC+0 only during Ramadan.

GMT/UTC+0 Countries by Region

Expand each region to see the full country list at a glance.

🌍 Western Europe 5 territories

These countries use GMT/UTC+0 in winter and shift to UTC+1 (BST / IST / WEST) during Daylight Saving Time in summer.

🇬🇧 United Kingdom
🇮🇪 Ireland
🇵🇹 Portugal (mainland)
🇫🇴 Faroe Islands
🇮🇨 Canary Islands (ES)
🧊 North Atlantic 1 country — no DST

Iceland is the only European country at UTC+0 year-round. It abolished DST in 1968, making it one of the few industrialised nations where clocks never change.

🇮🇸 Iceland
🌍 West & Central Africa 13 countries — no DST

Most West African nations sit directly on or near the prime meridian and observe UTC+0 all year — no clock changes ever.

🇸🇳 Senegal
🇬🇭 Ghana
🇨🇮 Côte d'Ivoire
🇬🇳 Guinea
🇬🇼 Guinea-Bissau
🇸🇱 Sierra Leone
🇱🇷 Liberia
🇹🇬 Togo
🇧🇯 Benin
🇧🇫 Burkina Faso
🇲🇱 Mali
🇲🇷 Mauritania
🇬🇲 Gambia
🇸🇹 São Tomé & Príncipe
🏜️ North Africa 2 territories

Morocco and Western Sahara use a unique time system: they observe UTC+1 permanently (since 2018), but revert to UTC+0 during the month of Ramadan — the reverse of typical DST. This makes them special cases: not true UTC+0 standard-time countries, but relevant because of the Ramadan-period reversion.

🇲🇦 Morocco
🇪🇭 Western Sahara

How UTC Offsets Work — The Full Picture

UTC is the master reference point. Every time zone in the world is expressed as an offset from UTC: positive (ahead) or negative (behind). UTC+0 is the baseline — and the only offset that is, by definition, perfectly synchronised with the global timekeeping standard.

OffsetHours vs UTCExample RegionsApprox. Countries
UTC−12−12 hoursBaker Island (uninhabited)1
UTC−5−5 hoursEastern US, Colombia, Peru~20
UTC−3−3 hoursBrazil (east), Argentina~12
UTC+00 (baseline)UK, Ghana, Iceland~24
UTC+1+1 hourCentral Europe, West/Central Africa~30
UTC+5:30+5 h 30 minIndia (IST)1
UTC+8+8 hoursChina, Singapore, Philippines~12
UTC+12+12 hoursNew Zealand, Fiji~8
UTC+14+14 hoursLine Islands (Kiribati)1

Explore all offsets in detail: World Time Zones List →

Daylight Saving Time and the GMT/UTC+0 Zone

Not all UTC+0 countries are at GMT around the clock. Daylight Saving Time (DST) means some nations temporarily advance their clocks by one hour in spring and return in autumn.

Countries that leave GMT in summer (DST applies)

The United Kingdom, Ireland, Portugal, the Faroe Islands, and the Canary Islands all shift to UTC+1 during summer months. This means they are technically not in the GMT zone during those months — even though their standard (winter) time is GMT/UTC+0. Western Sahara follows the same transitions as Morocco.

Note on Morocco & Western Sahara: These territories are a special case. Since 2018, they observe UTC+1 as their permanent standard time — not UTC+0. The only exception is the month of Ramadan, when clocks temporarily revert to UTC+0. They are therefore not UTC+0 standard-time countries.

Traveller's tip: If you're scheduling a call with someone in London in July, remember that the UK is on BST (British Summer Time = UTC+1), not GMT. Use our Time Zone Converter to avoid confusion.

Countries that stay at UTC+0 year-round (no DST)

Most West African nations — Ghana, Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire, Mali, and others — along with Iceland in Europe, observe UTC+0 every single day of the year, with no clock changes. These are the only true "year-round GMT countries."

Fascinating Facts About GMT and UTC Countries

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 The Prime Meridian Runs Through Several Countries

The 0° meridian line (the Prime Meridian) physically crosses the United Kingdom, France, Spain, Algeria, Mali, Burkina Faso, Togo, and Ghana — yet not all of these countries use UTC+0. France, for instance, uses UTC+1 (CET), despite the Prime Meridian passing through Paris. This historical anomaly dates back to political decisions made after World War II.

🇫🇷 France Has the Most Time Zones of Any Country — None Are UTC+0

Thanks to its overseas territories, France spans 12 time zones — more than any other country. Its mainland uses CET (UTC+1 in winter), and even though the Prime Meridian runs through Paris, French time diverged from GMT in 1940. After Liberation in 1944, France did not return to GMT+0 — instead settling on GMT+1 year-round. Daylight Saving Time (clocks moving to UTC+2 in summer) was not reintroduced until 1976, following the oil crisis. The result today: France runs one or two hours ahead of its natural solar meridian.

🇮🇸 Iceland: Europe's Only Nation Without Clock Changes

Iceland permanently abolished Daylight Saving Time in 1968. It remains at UTC+0 all year. Due to its northern latitude, Iceland experiences extreme seasonal daylight variation — nearly 24 hours of light in summer and very short days in winter — making DST particularly impractical.

⚓ The "Z" in Military and Aviation Stands for UTC+0

In NATO phonetic alphabet and aviation parlance, "Zulu Time" refers to UTC+0. Flight schedules, air traffic control, and military operations worldwide use Zulu Time as a universal reference, eliminating any ambiguity caused by time zones or DST transitions.

🌐 The Internet Runs on UTC

All major internet protocols, server timestamps, databases (such as UNIX epoch time), and SSL certificates use UTC as their reference. Every time a website logs an event, it almost certainly records it in UTC — then converts to local time for display purposes.

Frequently Asked Questions — GMT & UTC Countries

1 Which countries use GMT all year round (no Daylight Saving Time)?
The countries that stay at UTC+0 / GMT year-round without any DST clock changes include Iceland (in Europe) and the majority of West African nations: Ghana, Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Togo, Benin, Burkina Faso, Mali, Mauritania, Gambia, and São Tomé & Príncipe. These are the only countries where GMT/UTC+0 applies 365 days per year.
2 Is the UK always in the GMT time zone?
No. The United Kingdom uses GMT (UTC+0) only in winter — typically from late October to late March. During summer, the UK observes BST (British Summer Time = UTC+1), advancing clocks by one hour. So if you're scheduling a call with someone in London, be sure to check whether they are currently on GMT or BST. Our Time Zone Converter always reflects the correct current offset.
3 What is the difference between GMT and UTC?
GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) is based on solar time at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London, and has been used as the world's time reference since 1884. UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is a modern atomic-clock-based standard: coordination began in 1960, it was officially adopted in 1963, and the abbreviation "UTC" formalised in 1967. Both correspond to the same offset (UTC+0 = GMT), but UTC is more precise and is the official scientific and technical standard. In practice, for scheduling, travel, or business, the two terms are interchangeable. For a comprehensive breakdown, visit our page on GMT vs UTC.
4 Does France use GMT even though the Prime Meridian passes through Paris?
No — this is one of the most common time zone surprises. Despite the Prime Meridian (0° longitude) passing through Paris, France uses CET (Central European Time = UTC+1) in winter and CEST (UTC+2) in summer. The change began during the German occupation in 1940. After Liberation in 1944, France kept GMT+1 year-round instead of returning to GMT+0 — and Daylight Saving Time (shifting to UTC+2 in summer) was not reintroduced until 1976, during the oil crisis. So geographically France belongs at UTC+0, but politically it has remained at UTC+1 since the immediate post-war period.
5 How many time zones exist in the world?
There are approximately 37 distinct UTC offsets used around the world — more than the theoretical 24 because several regions use half-hour or quarter-hour offsets (e.g., India at UTC+5:30, Nepal at UTC+5:45, or Iran at UTC+3:30). These translate into roughly 195 recognised time zone names. You can explore the full list on our World Time Zones List page.
6 What is Zulu Time and how does it relate to GMT/UTC?
Zulu Time (Z) is the military and aviation term for UTC+0. In the NATO phonetic alphabet, "Z" is "Zulu," so UTC+0 became known as Zulu Time. Pilots, air traffic controllers, and military personnel around the world use Zulu Time to coordinate operations across multiple time zones without ambiguity. For example, a flight departing at 14:30Z means 2:30 PM UTC, regardless of what local time it is at the departure or arrival airport.
7 Which African country is located exactly on the Prime Meridian (0° longitude)?
Ghana is the most notable African country through which the Prime Meridian passes, running through the eastern part of the country. Ghana appropriately uses GMT (UTC+0) year-round with no DST — making it one of the few places on Earth where geographical and civil time are in perfect alignment. Accra, Ghana's capital, is often cited as the largest city actually located on the Prime Meridian.

Summary: GMT & UTC Countries at a Glance

UTC+0 (GMT) is observed as standard time by approximately 24 countries and territories spanning Western Europe, North Africa, and West Africa. Of these, only a subset — primarily Iceland and most West African nations — remain at UTC+0 year-round, while European countries like the UK, Ireland, and Portugal shift to UTC+1 during summer via Daylight Saving Time.

Understanding which countries are actually on GMT at any given moment requires checking for DST transitions. For real-time accuracy, use our Time Zone Converter — it always reflects the live, current offset for any city worldwide.

Curious how GMT officially compares to UTC from a technical standpoint? Read our in-depth explainer: GMT vs UTC — What's the Actual Difference?