World clocks

Time Zone Meeting Guide: Plan Calls Across Countries

A practical guide to planning meetings across time zones, choosing fair meeting hours, avoiding daylight saving mistakes, and using world clocks for remote teams.

Published June 11, 2026 - 7 minute read

Three analogue clocks over a world map for planning meetings across time zones

Planning a call across countries looks simple until one person says "9 AM my time" and everyone else has to translate it. A good time-zone workflow removes that friction: name the cities, compare the local times, check daylight saving rules, and choose a slot that is reasonable for the people who have to attend.

Start with cities, not abbreviations

Time-zone abbreviations are convenient but risky. CST can mean Central Standard Time, China Standard Time, or Cuba Standard Time depending on context. EST may be used casually even when a city is actually observing EDT. City names are clearer because a world clock can apply the correct local rule for New York, London, Singapore, Tokyo, Sydney, or any other meeting location.

For a remote team, write the meeting request as "Tuesday 10:00 in New York / 15:00 in London / 23:00 in Taipei" instead of only listing one reference time. This lowers the chance of a missed call and makes the invitation easier to scan.

Choose a fair meeting window

A fair meeting window usually avoids early mornings before 7:00 and late evenings after 21:00 for most participants. If that is impossible, rotate the inconvenient slot. For example, a United States, Europe, and East Asia team might alternate between a Europe-friendly call and an Asia-friendly call instead of making one region absorb the cost every week.

  • Use city-based local times for every participant.
  • Mark which people are outside normal working hours.
  • Rotate difficult slots when a global team has no perfect overlap.
  • Confirm the date as well as the time, especially across the Pacific.

Check daylight saving before important calls

Daylight saving time is the classic source of scheduling mistakes. The United States, Europe, Australia, and parts of South America can change clocks on different dates. Many countries do not change clocks at all. During those transition weeks, a recurring meeting can shift by one hour for part of the team.

Before a launch, interview, exam, webinar, or customer call, check the exact city time again. This is especially important when the invitation was created weeks earlier.

A simple workflow for remote teams

  1. List every participant city or office location.
  2. Open a world clock or meeting planner and add those cities.
  3. Look for a two-hour overlap inside reasonable local working hours.
  4. Write the invitation with at least three local examples.
  5. For recurring meetings, re-check the schedule around daylight saving changes.

Back to the journal

Time zone meeting FAQ

What is the easiest way to plan a meeting across time zones?

Start with the city where the meeting owner lives, add every participant city, then look for overlapping working hours. A world clock or meeting planner makes this easier than converting each time manually.

Why do time zone meetings go wrong around daylight saving time?

Not every country changes clocks on the same date, and some countries do not use daylight saving time at all. Always check city-based local time instead of relying only on abbreviations like EST, CST, or GMT.

Should remote teams rotate meeting times?

Yes, if the team spans very distant regions. Rotating the least convenient meeting slot is usually fairer than asking the same people to join early mornings or late nights every week.