Find a Meeting Time
Color-coded grid showing working hours across your selected time zones.
| UTC | London | Singapore |
|---|---|---|
| 00:00 UTC | 01:00 Thu | 08:00 Thu |
| 01:00 UTC | 02:00 Thu | 09:00 Thu |
| 02:00 UTC | 03:00 Thu | 10:00 Thu |
| 03:00 UTC | 04:00 Thu | 11:00 Thu |
| 04:00 UTC | 05:00 Thu | 12:00 Thu |
| 05:00 UTC | 06:00 Thu | 13:00 Thu |
| 06:00 UTC | 07:00 Thu | 14:00 Thu |
| 07:00 UTC | 08:00 Thu | 15:00 Thu |
| 08:00 UTC ★ | 09:00 Thu | 16:00 Thu |
| 09:00 UTC ★ | 10:00 Thu | 17:00 Thu |
| 10:00 UTC | 11:00 Thu | 18:00 Thu |
| 11:00 UTC | 12:00 Thu | 19:00 Thu |
| 12:00 UTC | 13:00 Thu | 20:00 Thu |
| 13:00 UTC | 14:00 Thu | 21:00 Thu |
| 14:00 UTC | 15:00 Thu | 22:00 Thu |
| 15:00 UTC | 16:00 Thu | 23:00 Thu |
| 16:00 UTC | 17:00 Thu | 00:00 Fri |
| 17:00 UTC | 18:00 Thu | 01:00 Fri |
| 18:00 UTC | 19:00 Thu | 02:00 Fri |
| 19:00 UTC | 20:00 Thu | 03:00 Fri |
| 20:00 UTC | 21:00 Thu | 04:00 Fri |
| 21:00 UTC | 22:00 Thu | 05:00 Fri |
| 22:00 UTC | 23:00 Thu | 06:00 Fri |
| 23:00 UTC | 00:00 Fri | 07:00 Fri |
How to Use the Meeting Planner
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1
Enter IANA timezone names separated by commas. Use the standard database format:
America/New_York,Europe/London,Asia/Kolkata. You can add up to 6 zones at once. -
2
Add optional labels for each zone. Instead of showing the raw timezone ID, labels let you name each column by team member or city - For example "Alice (NY), Bob (London)".
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3
Click "Update Grid & Share Link". The page reloads with a unique URL that encodes your zone selection. The share link at the top of the page is ready to copy immediately.
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4
Look for green overlap in the grid. Rows marked with a star on the left are hours where every selected timezone falls within standard business hours. Those are your best candidates for a live meeting.
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5
Copy the URL to share with your team. Recipients do not need an account. The link opens the same grid view for anyone. Paste it into Slack, email, or a calendar invite.
Interpreting the Color Grid
| Color | Local hour range | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Green | 09:00 – 18:00 | Ideal business hours. All participants are within the standard working day - The easiest time to book. |
| Yellow | 06:00 – 09:00 or 18:00 – 22:00 | Possible but not ideal. Early morning or evening - Manageable for occasional calls, but avoid making this the default slot. |
| Red | 22:00 – 06:00 | Night hours - Avoid for live meetings. Consider async video updates or written summaries instead when a participant falls in this range. |
Tips for Global Teams
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Always share the meeting link, not just a time. "3pm EST" means different things depending on DST, and recipients in other zones must do mental math. A planner URL shows every person's local equivalent instantly.
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Rotate who takes the inconvenient slot. If one team member is always meeting at 7am or 9pm, that is a retention risk. Spread the burden by cycling the meeting time across weeks.
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Use async video when no overlap exists. Tools like Loom, Notion, or a simple voice memo let teams with 10+ hour gaps communicate depth without anyone working nights.
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Set calendar events in each person's local timezone. Modern calendars accept IANA timezone fields. An invite with
America/Chicagowill render correctly for the recipient in any region and auto-adjust for DST transitions. -
Label zones with team member names, not just city names. When your Singapore office has three people and your London office has two, labeling columns "Priya & Raj" and "Sam & Yuki" is far more useful than a city name alone.
Popular Timezone Combinations
Click any combination to open a pre-built meeting grid instantly.