Shenzhen · Guangdong Province · China · South-East Asia

Current Time in Shenzhen

NTP-synchronised live clock · CST UTC+8no daylight saving time · Weather, world city comparison & complete city guide

Shenzhen Guangdong Province — People's Republic of China
UTC
22.5431°N 114.0579°E ~2 m elev.
🌡️ Current Weather in Shenzhen


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UTC Offset
Daylight SavingNo ⏰
vs New York
Population~18 mil.

The exact current time in Shenzhen is displayed live above, synchronised with international NTP servers. Known as China's Silicon Valley, Shenzhen operates on CST (China Standard Time), permanently fixed at UTC+8 throughout the year. China has not observed daylight saving time since 1991 — Shenzhen clocks never change. The IANA time zone identifier is Asia/Shanghai (CST, UTC+8), shared across all of mainland China. Shenzhen borders Hong Kong directly — the two cities are separated by an international boundary yet always share exactly the same time (both permanently UTC+8), making theirs the only international border in the world with no clock change on crossing.

01

Shenzhen Time vs Major World Cities – Live Comparison

CityCurrent TimeTime Zonevs Shenzhen
🇨🇳 Shenzhen±0
🇭🇰 Hong Kong
🇺🇸 New York
🇺🇸 Los Angeles
🇬🇧 London
🇫🇷 Paris
🇦🇪 Dubai
🇮🇳 Mumbai
🇸🇬 Singapore
🇯🇵 Tokyo
🇦🇺 Sydney
🇨🇳 Beijing
02

China Standard Time (CST) Explained – No Daylight Saving Time

CST is always UTC+8 — Shenzhen never changes its clocks
☀️ Summer UTC+8 CSTChina Standard Time
Clocks do NOT change
❄️ Winter UTC+8 CSTChina Standard Time
Clocks do NOT change

💡 No clock changes — ever. China observed daylight saving time (CDT, China Daylight Time, UTC+9) with interruptions between 1986 and 1991. Since September 1991, all of mainland China has permanently operated on CST (UTC+8). Shenzhen and Hong Kong present a globally unique case: two cities separated by an international border that always show exactly the same time — Shenzhen on Asia/Shanghai (CST) and Hong Kong on Asia/Hong_Kong (HKT), both permanently UTC+8. The permanent stability of CST means that the difference between Shenzhen and any other fixed-offset time zone (Dubai, Singapore, Tokyo) never changes, while the gap between Shenzhen and DST-observing cities (London, New York) varies exclusively when their clocks move.

03

Shenzhen Time Zone Converter – Convert CST to Any City

Enter a Shenzhen time to convert
AM Shenzhen (CST)
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🇦🇪Dubai--:--
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04

Shenzhen – Geography & Location Data

🌍LocationPearl River Delta, South ChinaGuangdong Province · borders Hong Kong to the south · P.R.C.
📌GPS Coordinates22.5431°N114.0579°E (east of Greenwich)
⛰️Elevation~2 m averageCoastal plain to the south, hills to the north; highest point: 944 m (Wutong Shan)
📐Area1,997 km²11 districts; Futian is the financial core and most densely developed
🌡️ClimateCwa (Köppen)Humid subtropical — hot humid summers (28–33°C), mild winters (13–20°C), typhoons Aug–Sep
🏭Economic centreChina's Silicon ValleyGlobal HQ: Huawei, Tencent, DJI, ZTE, BYD, OPPO; ~70% of world's consumer electronics production
05

Population & Administrative Data

Population~18 million (2024, registered + floating residents)
Population density~9,000 people/km² (among the highest in the world)
Official languageMandarin (Putonghua); Cantonese widely spoken locally
Administrative statusSub-provincial city (计划单列市); China's first Special Economic Zone (since 1980)
IANA time zoneAsia/Shanghai (CST, UTC+8)
International dialling code+86 (755 for Shenzhen)
Internet domain.cn / .中国
CurrencyRenminbi yuan (CNY, ¥)
Drives onRight 🚗
Country ISO codeCN (ISO 3166-1 alpha-2)
06

A Brief History of Shenzhen

  • pre-1979Before China's economic reform, Shenzhen was a collection of fishing and farming villages with a population of around 30,000, part of Bao'an County. Its location on the border with Hong Kong — then a prosperous British colony — gave it a particular character: thousands of mainland Chinese attempted each year to cross illegally by swimming or on foot, drawn by the incomparably higher standard of living in Hong Kong. The contrast was so dramatic that the border was nicknamed the freedom frontier by those who risked everything to cross it. In 1979 this would all change.
  • 1980On 26 August 1980, Deng Xiaoping officially designated Shenzhen as China's first Special Economic Zone (SEZ) — a radical experiment in controlled capitalism within a communist state. The idea was to create an isolated laboratory of economic reform, testing openness to foreign investment and market-economy rules without risking destabilisation of the entire country. Shenzhen was permitted to apply different laws, attract foreign capital and operate on capitalist principles — an unprecedented experiment in the history of communist China.
  • 1980–1990The transformation was staggering. In the SEZ's first decade, Shenzhen grew at approximately 30% per year — the fastest urbanisation in human history. The population exploded from 30,000 to over 2 million. Electronics, textile and assembly factories appeared in enormous numbers, fuelled by labour from across China. The skyline grew literally before visitors' eyes, with new skyscrapers inaugurated every month. Shenzhen became the living symbol of Deng's reform: proof that China could modernise without abandoning Party rule.
  • 1990–2000The second decade consolidated Shenzhen as a financial and stock-market centre: the Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE) was established in 1990, China's second exchange after Shanghai. The economy diversified from basic assembly toward more sophisticated industries: electronics, telecoms, financial products. Huawei (founded in Shenzhen in 1987) and ZTE (founded in 1985) began their rise to global prominence. Deng Xiaoping's famous tour of Shenzhen in 1992 (the Southern Tour) catalysed a new wave of reforms across all of China.
  • 2000–2010Shenzhen evolved into a world-class tech ecosystem. Tencent (founded 1998) grew exponentially, becoming one of the most valuable tech companies in the world. Foxconn's vast Longhua factory assembled millions of iPhones, iPads and PlayStations. The Huaqiangbei market became the world's largest electronics components trading hub — a place where any chip, sensor or electronic module imaginable can be found. Shenzhen earned the informal title of hardware capital of the world.
  • 2010–presentShenzhen reached maturity as a global metropolis. DJI (drones), BYD (electric vehicles), OPPO, OnePlus and Royole (the world's first flexible display) are Shenzhen-headquartered companies that have reshaped global industries. The Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA) plan, launched in 2019, integrates Shenzhen, Hong Kong and Guangzhou into an 86-million-person economic mega-cluster, with Shenzhen as its technology nucleus. Today, Shenzhen is not merely China's Silicon Valley but a genuine challenger to California's Silicon Valley in drones, EVs, AI and consumer hardware.
07

Top Attractions in Shenzhen

📱
Huaqiangbei – World Electronics CapitalHuaqiangbei (华强北) is the world's largest and densest electronics components trading hub, filling multiple multi-storey buildings and hundreds of thousands of square metres of specialist shops. You can find anything here: chips, screens, batteries, WiFi modules, sensors, drones, cables, soldering tools — all at factory prices. For tech and hardware enthusiasts worldwide, a visit to Huaqiangbei is a bucket-list experience. The market attracts engineers, startups and hobbyists from every corner of the globe who come to source components, test prototypes, or simply witness the raw future of technology in action.
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Shenzhen Skyline – Ping An Finance CentreThe Ping An Finance Centre (599 m) is the world's fourth-tallest skyscraper and the modern symbol of Shenzhen, dominating the skyline of the Futian financial district. The observation deck at floor 116 offers a breathtaking 360° panorama over the city and, on clear days, all the way to Hong Kong. Shun Hing Square (384 m) and CITIC Plaza complete a skyline that did not exist in 1980. The Shenzhen Bay promenade, with views across the bay towards Hong Kong, is the ideal vantage point to take in the skyline as a whole.
🏞️
Wutong Shan National ParkWutong Shan (梧桐山, 944 m) is Shenzhen's highest peak and the centrepiece of a 31 km² national park where dense bamboo and eucalyptus forests alternate with spectacular views over the bay and Hong Kong. The hiking trails are well-marked and draw tens of thousands of locals every weekend. In spring, Wutong Shan is famous for its wild cherry blossoms covering the hillsides. The park offers a remarkable contrast with the urban jungle at its base — a natural escape just kilometres from one of the world's densest financial districts.
🎨
OCT LOFT Creative Culture ParkOCT LOFT (华侨城创意文化园) is an art and design complex converted from a former industrial factory, now populated with independent galleries, creative company studios, specialty coffee shops, concept restaurants and cultural spaces. The Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism/Architecture (UABB) — one of the world's most significant architecture biennials, held alternately in Shenzhen and Hong Kong — uses OCT LOFT as its main venue. The area has transformed a decommissioned industrial quarter into a vibrant creative hub and the beating heart of Shenzhen's art and cultural scene.
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Shekou & Sea World – Shenzhen's Expat HeartShekou is Shenzhen's oldest industrial-port district, today transformed into a vibrant cosmopolitan neighbourhood populated by expats, artists and tech professionals. Sea World (海上世界) is Shekou's central piazza, built around a converted cruise ship repurposed as a cultural and commercial complex. International restaurants, bars, galleries and design shops line the harbour promenade. The Shenzhen–Hong Kong ferry departs from Shekou Ferry Terminal in just 30 minutes — the fastest cross-border connection. Shekou Seafood Street remains an essential gastronomic destination.
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Splendid China & Folk Culture VillagesSplendid China (锦绣中华) is a unique theme park featuring 1:15 scale replicas of China's most famous monuments — the Great Wall, the Forbidden City, the Temple of Heaven, the karst landscapes of Guilin — across 30 hectares. Adjacent China Folk Culture Villages showcases artefacts, costumes and traditional dances of China's 56 ethnic groups. The complex offers an efficient way to visualise China's vast diversity in a few hours — ideal for visitors with limited time who want a broad overview of Chinese cultural heritage before or after exploring the city itself.

✈️ Airports Serving Shenzhen

AirportIATADistanceTransferNotes
Shenzhen Bao'an International AirportSZX~32 km north-west of city centre~30 min (Metro Line 11 Airport Express); ~40–55 min (taxi)🌍 Major South China hub; direct connections to dozens of Chinese cities and international destinations
Hong Kong International Airport (Chek Lap Kok)HKG~50 km south (via ferry from Shekou or Fuyong)~30 min (direct ferry Shekou→HKG); ~60 min (Fuyong→HKG ferry)🛳 Major alternative; extensive intercontinental connections; no Great Firewall restrictions
08

Shenzhen Food – Cantonese Cuisine & the World's Melting Pot

🥢Dim Sum & Yum ChaShenzhen sits in the heart of Guangdong province, the cradle of Cantonese cuisine — widely regarded as the most refined in China. Dim Sum (small dishes served with tea) are an institution: har gow (translucent prawn dumplings), siu mai (open-topped pork dumplings), cheung fun (steamed rice noodle rolls), lo mai gai (glutinous rice in lotus leaf). The Sunday Yum Cha ritual draws thousands of families to Cantonese teahouses. Shenzhen offers some of the world's best Dim Sum at significantly lower prices than neighbouring Hong Kong.
🦐Fresh Seafood from the GulfShenzhen's coastal position means direct access to extraordinarily fresh seafood. Shatoujiao Seafood Street and Shekou restaurants are celebrated for river crabs (hairy crab in autumn), live lobster, giant prawns, clams and steamed whole fish. The Cantonese preparation style — steamed or quickly stir-fried over high heat with fresh ginger, spring onion and soy sauce — showcases the absolute freshness of the ingredients. Chiwan Fish Market is a spectacle in itself: hundreds of stalls of live crustaceans and tropical fish from the South China Sea.
🍜Wonton Noodle Soup & CongeeWonton Mee (云吞面) — thin egg noodles in clear pork-and-dried-shrimp broth with fresh pork and prawn wontons — is the staple street food of Shenzhen, available on every corner. Equally ubiquitous is congee (rice cooked to a silky porridge) with prawns, pork, ginger chicken or seafood combinations — the ideal breakfast for Shenzhen's subtropical climate. Claypot rice (rice cooked in a clay pot over direct flame with meat and caramelised soy) is another local classic, perfect for the cooler winter evenings.
🍲The Immigrant City's CuisineShenzhen is, more than any other Chinese city, a culinary melting pot. Its population is composed overwhelmingly of migrants from across China, and this is reflected in the food scene: restaurants from Sichuan (fiery spiced dishes), Hunan (even spicier), Xinjiang (cumin lamb kebabs, naan bread), Yunnan (rice noodles with fresh herbs, stone pot dishes) and dozens of international cuisines in the Shekou expat district. Shenzhen has one of the most diverse and affordable food landscapes in Asia.
🧋Milk Tea & Boba — Modern Tea CultureShenzhen is the unofficial capital of China's modern milk tea culture. Local giant HEYTEA (喜茶, founded in Shenzhen in 2012) revolutionised the industry with its fresh cheese tea and inspired hundreds of imitators worldwide. Nayuki (奈雪的茶, also founded in Shenzhen) added artisan bakery to the premium tea concept. The queues at these brands' flagship stores — with people waiting hours — sparked China's queuing culture phenomenon and made Shenzhen the global trendsetter for the modern tea-drinking experience.
🍻Craft Beer & Shekou GastropubsShenzhen has the most active craft beer scene in China, fuelled by its large expat community and young tech professionals. The Shekou district concentrates dozens of gastropubs and brewpubs serving local and international craft beer. Boxing Cat Brewery, Bionic Brew and scores of small local breweries produce lagers, IPAs, stouts and seasonal beers. Shenzhen's annual spring Beer Festival attracts tens of thousands. The night market in Coco Park (Futian district) is another hub of Shenzhen's cosmopolitan nightlife.
09

Practical Travel Information for Shenzhen

💧 Tap waterTap water in Shenzhen is not recommended for direct consumption. As throughout mainland China, bottled or boiled water is the norm. Bottled water is extremely cheap and available at every 24/7 convenience store. Hotels provide a hot/cold water dispenser or bottles in rooms. At restaurants, hot tea and all cooked drinks are safe.
🚌 Public transportThe Shenzhen Metro has 16 lines and 359 stations (2024), covering all major districts including the airport (Line 11) and Shekou Ferry Terminal. The Shenzhen Tong Card is the universal rechargeable transit card, similar to Hong Kong's Octopus Card. DiDi works excellently and is much cheaper than traditional taxis. The Hong Kong ferry from Shekou or Fuyong offers fast cross-border access to HKG airport or central Hong Kong.
⚡ Power plugsType A (two flat pins, US-style), Type I (three pins in a V, Australian-style) and Type C (two round pins, European-style) — 220V / 50 Hz. Chinese sockets often accept multiple plug types simultaneously. Visitors from Europe generally need only a plug adapter (voltage is compatible). Visitors from North America need both a plug adapter and a voltage converter. International hotels typically offer universal sockets and built-in USB ports.
🗣️ LanguageMandarin (Putonghua) is the official language; Cantonese is widely spoken locally due to proximity with Hong Kong and Guangzhou. English is spoken in international hotels, Shekou and the tech/startup sector, but is rarely encountered in ordinary restaurants. Google Translate's camera function (real-time OCR) is indispensable for menus. Download offline translation packs before departure, as Google is blocked without a VPN in mainland China.
📵 Internet & VPNChina enforces the Great Firewall: Google, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Wikipedia — all blocked. A VPN installed and tested before arrival is essential for foreign visitors. WeChat and Alipay work freely. Advantage over some Chinese cities: Shenzhen's Qianhai Free Trade Zone and some luxury hotels offer more relaxed internet access. Tourist SIM cards with international data roaming can partially bypass the firewall.
💳 PaymentsShenzhen is arguably the world's most cashless city. Alipay and WeChat Pay via QR code are ubiquitous — even street vendors accept them. Foreign visitors can link international Visa/Mastercard to Alipay or use WeChat Pay's International Card function. Credit cards are accepted at hotels and large malls. ICBC, Bank of China and UnionPay ATMs accept international cards. Cash (CNY) remains useful at traditional markets. Tip: set up Alipay with your card before departure.
🛂 Dress & tippingDress standards in Shenzhen are cosmopolitan and smart-casual, reflecting the city's young, international tech workforce. Tipping is not customary in China and can occasionally seem rude at traditional restaurants. Service charges are not normally added to bills. At international hotels, small tips for porters and housekeeping are understood. The climate is warm for much of the year — light layers and an umbrella for the wet season (April–September) are advisable.
🛁 Visas & HK BorderCitizens of the United States, United Kingdom, Canada and Australia require a Chinese tourist visa (type L) for mainland Shenzhen, obtained from a Chinese consulate before travel. Many EU nationalities qualify for China's expanded 15-day visa-free programme (2024) — verify current eligibility on the Chinese Embassy website. Note: a Chinese visa does NOT automatically permit entry to Hong Kong. Hong Kong manages its own immigration. The Shenzhen–Hong Kong border crossing is among the world's busiest; allow time for queues at peak hours. Because both cities are UTC+8, no clock adjustment is needed on crossing.
📱 Tech & ShoppingShenzhen is the world's electronics shopping paradise. Huaqiangbei for components at factory prices. SEG Electronics Market, Mingtong Digital Mall and Renren Digital for gadgets and accessories. COCO Park, MixC Mall and Vientiane City for premium international brands. Shenzhen produces roughly 70% of the world's consumer electronics — for buying gadgets, accessories or hardware components, no other place on Earth offers comparable variety and prices.
10

Frequently Asked Questions – Shenzhen Time Zone & CST

Shenzhen uses CST (China Standard Time, UTC+8) permanently, throughout the entire year. China has a single official time zone for the whole mainland, and the IANA identifier is Asia/Shanghai, used for Shenzhen as well. China has not observed daylight saving time since 1991, so the UTC+8 offset never changes.
Yes, always. Shenzhen (CST, Asia/Shanghai, UTC+8) and Hong Kong (HKT, Asia/Hong_Kong, UTC+8) permanently share the same UTC+8 offset, despite using different IANA identifiers. The Shenzhen–Hong Kong border is the only international border in the world where crossing does not change the clock at all. This permanent time alignment greatly simplifies the cross-border business, logistics and daily life of the approximately 500,000 people who cross daily.
Shenzhen is 13 hours ahead of New York in winter (EST, UTC−5). When New York switches to EDT (UTC−4) in mid-March, Shenzhen is 12 hours ahead. The gap returns to 13 hours when the US reverts to EST in early November. Shenzhen clocks never change; only the US clock transition alters the difference. Quick conversion: New York 09:00 EST = Shenzhen 22:00 CST (same day); New York 09:00 EDT = Shenzhen 21:00 CST.
Shenzhen is 8 hours ahead of London in winter (GMT, UTC+0). When the UK switches to BST (UTC+1) in late March, Shenzhen is 7 hours ahead. The gap returns to 8 hours in late October. Quick conversion: London 09:00 GMT = Shenzhen 17:00 CST; London 09:00 BST = Shenzhen 16:00 CST.
Shenzhen is 16 hours ahead of Los Angeles in winter (PST, UTC−8). When LA switches to PDT (UTC−7) in mid-March, Shenzhen is 15 hours ahead. Quick conversion: Los Angeles 09:00 PST = Shenzhen 01:00 CST (next day); Los Angeles 09:00 PDT = Shenzhen 00:00 CST (midnight, next day).
Shenzhen is always 4 hours ahead of Dubai (CST UTC+8 vs GST UTC+4). Neither China nor the UAE observes daylight saving time, so this 4-hour difference is permanently constant year-round. Shenzhen 09:00 CST = Dubai 05:00 GST.
No. China observed daylight saving time (CDT, China Daylight Time, UTC+9) with interruptions between 1986 and 1991. Since September 1991, all of mainland China has operated on CST (UTC+8) every day of the year. This makes coordinating international business with Shenzhen predictable year-round: the clock never shifts overnight.
There are several ways to cross the Shenzhen–Hong Kong border. Direct metro (MTR): Lo Wu or Lok Ma Chau stations in Shenzhen connect directly to Hong Kong's MTR network, with a total journey to central Hong Kong of 40–50 minutes. High-speed rail (WKT): from Hong Kong's West Kowloon station to Shenzhen North in just 14 minutes — the fastest overland option. Ferry: from Shekou or Fuyong Ferry Terminal to HKG airport or central Hong Kong in 30–40 minutes. Important: when crossing the border, the clock does not change — both cities are permanently UTC+8.