From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A time offset is defined by international convention as a number of hours and minutes from Coordinated Universal Time in Greenwich, England. Many time zones employ two time offsets, one for standard time and one for daylight saving time.
Here is a table of time offsets for the United States of America with current times:
This page was served on 13:56 UTC
Time Zone |
Standard Time |
Daylight Time |
Chamorro |
+10 hours (00:17) |
n/a |
Atlantic |
−4 hours (10:17) |
n/a |
U.S. Eastern |
−5 hours |
−4 hours (10:17) |
U.S. Central |
−6 hours |
−5 hours (09:17) |
U.S. Mountain |
−7 hours |
−6 hours (08:17) |
Arizona |
−7 hours (07:17) |
n/a |
U.S. Pacific |
−8 hours |
−7 hours (07:17) |
Alaska |
−9 hours |
−8 hours (06:17) |
Aleutian |
−10 hours |
−9 hours (05:17) |
Hawaii |
−10 hours (04:17) |
n/a |
Samoa |
−11 hours (03:17) |
n/a |
Hawaii and most of Arizona (excluding only the Navajo Nation) do not observe daylight saving time.