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World Clock — Live Time in 34 Cities & Meeting Sweet-Spot Finder | LazyTools
Date & Time Tool

Free World Clock — Live Time in Multiple Cities & Meeting Planner

See the current time in multiple cities around the world — updated every second. Default clocks cover the Gulf region: Dubai, Riyadh, London, New York, Mumbai and Singapore. Furthermore, the meeting sweet-spot finder colours every hour of the day by business-hours overlap, instantly revealing which hours work simultaneously for every active city.

34 cities worldwideGulf & ME defaultsLive every secondMeeting sweet-spot gridBusiness hours indicator
👥 Meeting sweet-spot — business hours overlap (8am–6pm local)
Business hours Early / late Night

How to use the World Clock

1
View the default city clocks
Six clocks load automatically: Dubai, Riyadh, London, New York, Mumbai and Singapore. Furthermore, each clock shows the current time, date, UTC offset and a business-hours status badge that updates every second.
2
Add more cities
Use the Add a City dropdown to choose from 34 cities. The list includes all GCC capitals, major Asian hubs and Western business centres. Furthermore, click Add Clock and the new clock appears in the grid immediately.
3
Remove clocks you do not need
Click the × in the top-right corner of any card to remove it. Additionally, the meeting sweet-spot grid regenerates automatically whenever you change the active clock set.
4
Read the meeting sweet-spot grid
The grid shows every hour of the day — rows — against every active city — columns. Green cells show business hours (8am–6pm local). Yellow shows early morning or late evening. Furthermore, look for rows where all or most columns show green — those are your best meeting windows.
5
Hover any cell for the exact local hour
Hovering a cell in the sweet-spot grid shows the exact local hour in that city for that UTC time. Furthermore, this removes any need for mental offset arithmetic when pinpointing the precise meeting slot.

Cities available and their regions

The world clock includes 34 cities across six regions. Furthermore, the Gulf and Middle East selection is the broadest of any free online world clock tool — reflecting the tool's primary regional audience.

RegionCities
Gulf & Middle EastDubai, Abu Dhabi, Riyadh, Jeddah, Doha, Kuwait City, Manama, Cairo, Istanbul, Muscat
South & East AsiaKarachi, Mumbai, Delhi, Dhaka, Singapore, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Tokyo, Seoul
OceaniaSydney, Melbourne, Auckland
EuropeLondon, Paris, Berlin, Moscow
AmericasNew York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Toronto, São Paulo
AfricaNairobi, Lagos
ReferenceUTC

How the meeting sweet-spot grid works

The grid maps all 24 hours of the day against each active city clock. Green cells show hours that fall within business hours — 8am to 6pm local time. Yellow shows fringe hours — 6am to 8am or 6pm to 10pm. Furthermore, grey shows night hours where scheduling meetings is impractical. A row showing green across all columns is an optimal shared meeting window for all active cities simultaneously.

How world clock time conversion works

The world clock uses the browser's built-in Intl.DateTimeFormat API with IANA timezone identifiers. Furthermore, this approach handles daylight saving time automatically — when a city observes DST, the displayed time shifts on the correct date without any manual configuration.

City time = new Date().toLocaleString('en-GB', {timeZone: 'Asia/Dubai'})
IANA timezone ID = official identifier like 'Asia/Dubai' or 'America/New_York'
DST handling = automatic via browser timezone database
Gulf cities = no DST — UTC offset fixed year-round (Dubai UTC+4, Riyadh UTC+3)
Update interval = 1000ms setInterval — refreshes every second

Why Dubai and Abu Dhabi show the same time

Both cities are in the UAE and use Gulf Standard Time (GST, UTC+4) year-round. The UAE does not observe daylight saving time. Furthermore, Doha (Qatar) uses Arabia Standard Time (UTC+3) without DST. Riyadh (Saudi Arabia), Kuwait City and Manama also sit at UTC+3. This fixed-offset structure makes Gulf cities predictable reference points for international scheduling — the UTC gap from Western cities changes seasonally, but the Gulf side never moves.

Worked example: finding a Dubai–London–New York meeting window

A Dubai team needs a weekly call that works for London and New York counterparts during winter (when London is UTC+0 and New York is UTC-5).

Dubai timeLondon timeNew York timeAll in business hours?
09:00 UAE05:00 UK00:00 NYNo — NY midnight
14:00 UAE10:00 UK06:00 NYPartial — NY early
17:00 UAE13:00 UK09:00 NYYes — all in hours
18:00 UAE14:00 UK10:00 NYYes — all in hours
19:00 UAE15:00 UK11:00 NYPartial — UAE late
The sweet spot is 17:00–18:00 Dubai time — the only two hours where all three offices fall within standard business hours. The sweet-spot grid shows this window as a solid green row across all three city columns, making it findable in under five seconds.

Gulf Standard Time quick reference

Gulf Standard Time (GST, UTC+4) covers the UAE and Oman. Arabia Standard Time (AST, UTC+3) covers Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar and Kuwait. Furthermore, neither zone observes daylight saving time. This fixed offset makes Gulf cities the most reliable international scheduling anchor — the gap from any DST-observing country changes twice a year, but the Gulf's side never moves.

What is a world clock?

A world clock shows the current local time in multiple cities simultaneously. Furthermore, it removes the offset arithmetic that makes manual conversion error-prone. Modern web-based world clocks update every second and handle daylight saving time transitions automatically through the browser's timezone database.

The concept dates from 19th-century telegraph exchange rooms. Furthermore, the need intensified with railway expansion. Operators kept multiple clocks on the wall showing connected city times. Moreover, each clock helped dispatchers coordinate arrivals and departures reliably. — a single local time could not coordinate arrivals and departures across multiple timezone boundaries. The world clock became a practical necessity for commerce and communication.

Who needs a world clock?

Distributed teams rely on world clocks for every scheduling decision. Furthermore, a Dubai company with London and New York partners needs three simultaneous times for each meeting. Furthermore, freelancers serving international clients face this challenge daily, often across four or more time zones.

Financial traders watch multiple market clocks to track trading session overlaps between Tokyo, London and New York. Supply chain teams monitor shipment windows across departure and arrival time zones. Moreover, customer support teams managing follow-the-sun coverage use world clocks to manage handover timing precisely between regional shifts.

Gulf time zones explained

The Gulf region uses two stable time zones. Gulf Standard Time (UTC+4) covers the UAE and Oman. Arabia Standard Time (UTC+3) covers Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar and Kuwait. Furthermore, no Gulf country observes daylight saving time — the UTC offset never changes throughout the year. This stability makes Gulf times uniquely easy to track internationally.

Why a world clock matters for Gulf and global business

Time zone errors cost businesses real money. A contractor who miscalculates a DST transition and schedules a client call at the wrong time creates a negative impression that damages the relationship. Furthermore, automated notifications sent at 3 AM local time due to server timezone mismatches erode product trust and generate unnecessary support tickets.

Dubai occupies a unique scheduling position. The city sits at UTC+4 year-round, placing it between Asian and European business hours without tracking either continent's daylight saving pattern. Moreover, a Dubai business dealing with London gains one extra hour of overlap in winter (London at UTC+0) versus summer (London at UTC+1) — a seasonal shift that catches international teams off guard every year.

How the meeting sweet-spot grid saves coordination time

Finding a meeting time for three or more international offices typically requires multiple back-and-forth messages. The sweet-spot grid eliminates this overhead. Furthermore, it shows all business-hours windows for all active cities simultaneously in a single visual. Identifying the optimal slot becomes a five-second visual scan rather than a multi-step calculation. Moreover, this efficiency multiplies for weekly recurring calls — identify the window once and reuse it indefinitely.

Frequently asked questions

Yes. The clock uses the browser's built-in timezone database, which handles DST adjustments on the correct date. When London shifts from GMT (UTC+0) to BST (UTC+1) in late March, the displayed time updates automatically without any manual change. Furthermore, Gulf cities — Dubai, Riyadh, Doha, Kuwait City — never observe DST, so their times are always fixed year-round.
Both cities are in the UAE and operate on Gulf Standard Time (GST, UTC+4) year-round. The UAE does not observe daylight saving time. Furthermore, no UAE emirate operates on a different timezone — the entire country uses a single offset. This makes UAE cities the most stable clock reference for international scheduling.
The grid maps 24 UTC hours against each active city. Green cells show hours that fall within business hours — 8am to 6pm local time. Yellow shows early or late fringe hours. Furthermore, grey shows night-time hours. A row showing green across all columns represents an hour where every active city is simultaneously within business hours. That row is your optimal meeting window.
The grid displays up to eight city clocks simultaneously. Adding a ninth city removes the oldest one automatically. Furthermore, you can swap cities at any time — remove a clock with the × button and add a different city from the dropdown. All 34 available cities remain accessible in the dropdown regardless of which are currently active.
UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) serves as the universal reference for all time zones. Furthermore, developers, system administrators and financial professionals routinely need to cross-reference their local time against UTC when reading server logs, API response timestamps or financial settlement records. Adding UTC as a clock eliminates the conversion step entirely.

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