World Time Zones โ
Every UTC Offset Explained
All 38+ distinct UTC offsets, 195 countries, thousands of cities. From UTCโ12 to UTC+14 โ the definitive reference for global time zones, with live clocks, DST status, history, and recent changes.
Who governs the world's time zones?
Time zones are not simply geographic conventions โ they are governed by a complex international system of specialized bodies and multilateral agreements. No state can be forced to adopt a particular offset, but clear global standards exist. Understanding who controls global time matters for aviation, finance, computing, and everyday scheduling.
The ITU, a specialized UN agency headquartered in Geneva (founded 1865), manages the UTC standard through the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM). ITU publishes Recommendation ITU-R TF.460, which defines UTC globally.
Every sovereign state decides its own time zone โ the ITU cannot mandate, only recommend alignment to whole-hour UTC offsets. Time zone decisions are ultimately political, not technical.
GMT vs UTC โ differences and similarities โHow did time zones come to be?
Before 1884, every city set its own local time by the sun. Bristol was 10 minutes behind London. The Industrial Revolution and the railways turned this diversity into operational chaos โ and forced global standardization.
All time zones โ UTCโ12 to UTC+14
Every distinct UTC offset with standard abbreviations, representative countries and cities, DST status, and live current time. The table covers all 38+ time zones, including fractional offsets (:30 and :45 minutes). Use the filters to find what you need instantly.
| UTC Offset | Abbreviations | Live Time | Countries & Major Cities | DST? | Key Notes |
|---|
UTC offsets โ visualized
Each bar represents the distance from UTCยฑ0. Fractional zones (India +5:30, Nepal +5:45, Iran +3:30) stand out clearly โ their unusual lengths reflect deliberate political or historical choices.
๐ต West (UTCโ) ย |ย ๐ข UTCยฑ0 ย |ย ๐ด East (UTC+) ย |ย ๐ก Fractional (:30 / :45) ย ย โ Interactive Map
How many time zones does each continent have?
Africa is the most "disciplined" continent โ all whole-hour offsets, no DST anywhere. The Pacific Ocean hosts the absolute extremes of global time, with a 26-hour spread between its westernmost and easternmost points.
Who changes the clocks and when?
Clock changes are not globally synchronized. The US and Canada spring forward 2โ3 weeks before Europe, creating transition windows where the usual time differences shift by ยฑ1 hour. This matters enormously for scheduling international meetings or flights.
Fascinating time zone facts
Not all countries chose whole-hour UTC offsets. Some use 30 or even 45-minute fractions โ for political, historical, or economic reasons. Here are the world's most remarkable cases.
India uses a single national time zone across its entire vast territory (29ยฐ of longitude). The +30-minute offset from Pakistan was chosen for political reasons at independence in 1947. In Assam (far east), the sun rises as early as 4:30 AM in summer.
FractionalThe only time zone on Earth with a 45-minute fraction. Nepal chose UTC+5:45 deliberately to differentiate from India (UTC+5:30) and to align more accurately with Kathmandu's geographic longitude. Nearly impossible to calculate mentally.
World uniqueIran historically combined a fractional offset (+3:30) with Daylight Saving Time (+4:30 in summer) โ a global rarity. However, Iran permanently suspended DST in 2016 and has observed UTC+3:30 year-round ever since.
Fixed fractionalChina spans five natural time zones but since 1949 uses a single official time (UTC+8) for all 1.4 billion people. In Urumqi (western Xinjiang), the sun sets after 10 PM in summer. The Uyghur minority informally observes UTC+6.
Political zoneThe Line Islands of Kiribati are 26 hours ahead of Baker Island (UTCโ12). At the same absolute instant, two different calendar dates coexist on Earth. Kiribati adopted UTC+14 in 1995 so the entire country shares the same calendar day.
Absolute maximumSamoa moved from UTCโ11 to UTC+13 on December 29, 2011 โ skipping Friday, December 30 entirely (the date never existed in Samoa). The reason: commercial alignment with Australia and New Zealand. The first +24h calendar jump in peacetime history.
Historic changeCountries that changed their time zone
Time zones are not immutable โ governments can change them at any time by legislation. Here are the most significant changes of the last 15 years and what they mean in practice.