Remote and distributed work means scheduling across time zones, and that is where the ChrysoKit Timezone Converter pays off. Compare any number of cities side by side and find the overlap that works.
Why use it
Most timezone tools handle one pair at a time. Real meetings have three, four or five participants in different cities. This tool was built for that.
How to use the Timezone Converter
- Pick a source city and time.
- Add as many destination cities as you need.
- Slide the time selector to find an hour that works everywhere.
- Copy a shareable summary for the calendar invite.
Features worth knowing
Multi-city comparison
Stack as many cities as your meeting actually has.
Daylight saving aware
Automatic handling of DST transitions, including the half-hour offsets.
Shareable summary
Copy a clean text block of the time across all cities.
Pro tips
- Anchor the meeting to a city, not to your local time. It removes one round of mental conversion for everyone else.
- When pasting times into invites, include the time zone abbreviation. 'Tuesday 3pm' is ambiguous; 'Tuesday 3pm CET' is not.
- Daylight saving days are the worst day to schedule cross-country calls. Push to the day after.
Privacy first. The Timezone Converter runs entirely in your browser. Nothing you enter is sent to a server.
The Timezone Converter is the calmer way to schedule across borders. Use it before sending the invite.
Open the tool: Timezone Converter →