Current Time in Kuala Lumpur
NTP-synchronised live clock · MYT UTC+8 · No Daylight Saving Time
The exact current time in Kuala Lumpur is displayed live above, synchronised with international NTP servers.
Malaysia's capital operates on MYT (Malaysia Time), permanently fixed at UTC+8 all year round — no seasonal clock changes, ever.
Malaysia has never observed daylight saving time in the modern era, and since 1 January 1982 has used UTC+8 exclusively, abandoning the former UTC+7:30 offset used by Peninsular Malaysia.
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The IANA time zone identifier is Asia/Kuala_Lumpur (MYT, UTC+8), numerically identical to Singapore Time (SGT) and Hong Kong Time (HKT), but maintained as a distinct identifier reflecting Malaysia's own time zone history.
For travellers and businesses coordinating between Kuala Lumpur and Europe, the offset is 7 or 8 hours ahead of London, and 12 or 13 hours ahead of New York, depending on whether DST is in effect in those locations.
Kuala Lumpur Time vs. World Cities – Live Comparison
| City | Current Time | Time Zone | vs. Kuala Lumpur |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇲🇾 Kuala Lumpur | … | … | ±0 |
| 🇬🇧 London | … | … | … |
| 🇺🇸 New York | … | … | … |
| 🇺🇸 Los Angeles | … | … | … |
| 🇫🇷 Paris | … | … | … |
| 🇦🇪 Dubai | … | GST UTC+4 | … |
| 🇮🇳 Mumbai | … | IST UTC+5:30 | … |
| 🇸🇬 Singapore | … | SGT UTC+8 | … |
| 🇭🇰 Hong Kong | … | HKT UTC+8 | … |
| 🇯🇵 Tokyo | … | JST UTC+9 | … |
| 🇦🇺 Sydney | … | … | … |
| 🇺🇸 Chicago | … | … | … |
Malaysia Time (MYT) Explained – No Daylight Saving Time
Clocks DO NOT change
Clocks DO NOT change
💡 No clock changes, ever. Peninsular Malaysia historically used UTC+7:30 (Malayan Standard Time) until 1 January 1982, when it adopted UTC+8 to unify with Sabah and Sarawak (East Malaysia, already on UTC+8) and to align with Singapore and Hong Kong. The IANA identifier Asia/Kuala_Lumpur is distinct from Asia/Singapore (same UTC+8, but separate IANA histories) and from Asia/Kuching (East Malaysia). Malaysia's location near the equator makes DST functionally irrelevant: the difference in daylight hours between January and July in Kuala Lumpur is only around 10 minutes — far too small to warrant clock changes. For international businesses and travellers, MYT's permanent stability means scheduling with Kuala Lumpur never requires seasonal recalculations. Any change in the time gap between Kuala Lumpur and cities like London or New York is always caused by their clocks changing, never by Malaysia's.
Kuala Lumpur Time Zone Converter – Compare with World Cities
Kuala Lumpur – Geography & Location Data
Population & Administrative Data
| City population (KL) | ~1.8 million (2024) |
| Greater KL metro area | ~8.6 million |
| Official language | Malay (Bahasa Malaysia) |
| Common languages | English, Mandarin, Tamil |
| Administrative status | Federal Territory (since 1974) |
| International dialling code | +60 (3 for KL) |
| Internet TLD | .my |
| Currency | Malaysian Ringgit (MYR / RM) |
| Driving side | Left 🚗 |
| ISO country code | MY (ISO 3166-1 alpha-2) |
Brief History of Kuala Lumpur
- 1857Kuala Lumpur was founded as a tin-mining camp at the confluence of the Klang and Gombak rivers — the name means "muddy confluence" in Malay. The first settlers were Hakka Chinese miners brought by Raja Abdullah to exploit the rich tin deposits around Ampang. Mortality was high from malaria and tribal conflicts, but the economic promise of tin attracted thousands of migrants within years.
- 1880–1896Yap Ah Loy, known as Capitan China, rebuilt Kuala Lumpur after a devastating fire in 1881 and transformed it into a thriving commercial centre. British Resident Frank Swettenham relocated the Selangor capital from Klang to Kuala Lumpur in 1880 and modernised the infrastructure. The arrival of the railway in 1886 accelerated growth dramatically. In 1896, Kuala Lumpur became the capital of the Federated Malay States under British administration.
- 1941–1945Japan occupied Kuala Lumpur on 11 January 1942, just 70 days after Pearl Harbor, advancing through the peninsula's jungle in one of World War II's fastest military campaigns. The Japanese occupation (1942–1945) brought severe hardship: a command economy, reprisals against the Chinese community, and an acute food shortage. The British liberation in August 1945 restored colonial administration, but the independence movement was irreversible.
- 1957–1963Malaysian independence was proclaimed on 31 August 1957 at Merdeka Stadium in Kuala Lumpur, with Tunku Abdul Rahman as the first Prime Minister. Kuala Lumpur became the national capital. In 1963, the Federation of Malaysia united the Peninsula, Singapore, Sabah and Sarawak — Singapore separated in 1965. Kuala Lumpur was designated a Federal Territory in 1974, separated from Selangor state.
- 1982On 1 January 1982, Peninsular Malaysia switched from UTC+7:30 (Malayan Standard Time) to UTC+8, unifying with Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore. This change gave Malaysia one of the most stable and predictable time zones in the world, which it maintains to this day. The IANA identifier
Asia/Kuala_Lumpurdocuments this historical transition. - 1990–presentUnder Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad's Vision 2020 policy, Malaysia pursued rapid industrialisation. The Petronas Twin Towers (completed 1998, 452 m), the world's tallest buildings at the time, became a global symbol of Malaysia's economic rise. Today Kuala Lumpur is a major hub for aviation, finance, Islamic banking, semiconductor manufacturing and halal tourism, with KLIA ranked among Southeast Asia's busiest airports.
Top Tourist Attractions in Kuala Lumpur
Practical Information for Travellers – Kuala Lumpur
| Time Zone | MYT — Malaysia Time (Asia/Kuala_Lumpur, UTC+8, permanent) |
| Daylight Saving Time | Not observed. MYT is UTC+8 permanently, year-round. |
| vs. London | +8 hrs in winter (GMT) · +7 hrs in summer (BST), due to UK DST |
| vs. New York | +13 hrs in winter (EST) · +12 hrs in summer (EDT), due to US DST |
| vs. Los Angeles | +16 hrs in winter (PST) · +15 hrs in summer (PDT) |
| vs. Paris / Berlin | +7 hrs in winter (CET) · +6 hrs in summer (CEST) |
| vs. Singapore | ±0 hrs (SGT = UTC+8, identical to MYT) |
| vs. Hong Kong | ±0 hrs (HKT = UTC+8, identical to MYT) |
| vs. Tokyo | −1 hr (JST = UTC+9) |
| vs. Dubai | +4 hrs (GST = UTC+4, stable) |
| Visa (EU/UK citizens) | Visa-free entry up to 90 days; always verify current regulations before travel |
| Currency | Malaysian Ringgit (MYR / RM); bank cards widely accepted in tourist areas |
| Electrical outlets | Type G (British standard, 230V, 50Hz) |
Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) – Time Zone & Connections
Kuala Lumpur is served by two main airports: KLIA (Kuala Lumpur International Airport, IATA: KUL) and KLIA2 (the low-cost carrier terminal, hub for AirAsia). Both are located at Sepang, approximately 57 km south of the city centre. Because Malaysia does not observe daylight saving time, all flight schedules are consistent year-round — no seasonal timetable adjustments are ever required.
| Airport | IATA Code | Transfer to KL Centre | Time Zone |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) | KUL | ~28 min (KLIA Ekspres) | MYT UTC+8 |
| KLIA2 (Low-Cost Terminal) | KUL | ~33 min (KLIA Ekspres) | MYT UTC+8 |
| Sultan Abdul Aziz Shah Airport (Subang) | SZB | ~30 min by car | MYT UTC+8 |
The KLIA Ekspres express rail link connects KLIA and KLIA2 to KL Sentral station in the city centre in 28–33 minutes, with departures every 15–20 minutes. It is the fastest and most comfortable transfer option, with fixed pricing and generous baggage allowance. Taxis and bus services are slower (60–90 minutes) but significantly cheaper.
Kuala Lumpur Time Zone – Frequently Asked Questions
Asia/Kuala_Lumpur, distinct from Asia/Singapore (same UTC+8 value but a separate IANA history) and Asia/Kuching (East Malaysia). The UTC+8 value is numerically identical to Singapore Time, Hong Kong Time and China Standard Time.Asia/Kuala_Lumpur vs. Asia/Singapore. The distinction matters for historical data — before 1 January 1982, Peninsular Malaysia used UTC+7:30, while Singapore had already adopted UTC+8 in 1982. Since that date, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore display exactly the same time. Neither city observes DST.Asia/Kuala_Lumpur vs. Asia/Hong_Kong), reflecting each city's distinct time zone history. In practice, a meeting scheduled at 14:00 MYT in Kuala Lumpur occurs simultaneously at 14:00 HKT in Hong Kong — no conversion required.