139

How do I convert a time to another timezone in Python?

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10 Answers 10

142

I have found that the best approach is to convert the "moment" of interest to a utc-timezone-aware datetime object (in python, the timezone component is not required for datetime objects).

Then you can use astimezone to convert to the timezone of interest (reference).

from datetime import datetime
import pytz

utcmoment_naive = datetime.utcnow()
utcmoment = utcmoment_naive.replace(tzinfo=pytz.utc)

# print "utcmoment_naive: {0}".format(utcmoment_naive) # python 2
print("utcmoment_naive: {0}".format(utcmoment_naive))
print("utcmoment:       {0}".format(utcmoment))

localFormat = "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"

timezones = ['America/Los_Angeles', 'Europe/Madrid', 'America/Puerto_Rico']

for tz in timezones:
    localDatetime = utcmoment.astimezone(pytz.timezone(tz))
    print(localDatetime.strftime(localFormat))

# utcmoment_naive: 2017-05-11 17:43:30.802644
# utcmoment:       2017-05-11 17:43:30.802644+00:00
# 2017-05-11 10:43:30
# 2017-05-11 19:43:30
# 2017-05-11 13:43:30

So, with the moment of interest in the local timezone (a time that exists), you convert it to utc like this (reference).

localmoment_naive = datetime.strptime('2013-09-06 14:05:10', localFormat)

localtimezone = pytz.timezone('Australia/Adelaide')

try:
    localmoment = localtimezone.localize(localmoment_naive, is_dst=None)
    print("Time exists")

    utcmoment = localmoment.astimezone(pytz.utc)

except pytz.exceptions.NonExistentTimeError as e:
    print("NonExistentTimeError")
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  • 7
    beware, local time may be ambiguous and the given string might not correspond to any existing time e.g., due to DST transitions. Provide localize(is_dst=None) if you want to raise an exception in such cases.
    – jfs
    Sep 4, 2014 at 12:34
  • 2
    Going to save this answer off somewhere as I think I will reference it at least twice a week :P
    – joshmcode
    Sep 1, 2021 at 19:46
61

Using pytz

from datetime import datetime
from pytz import timezone

fmt = "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %Z%z"
timezonelist = ['UTC','US/Pacific','Europe/Berlin']
for zone in timezonelist:

    now_time = datetime.now(timezone(zone))
    print now_time.strftime(fmt)
4
  • 12
    note: it prints different time moments in different timezones. OP asks about the same time moment in different timezones.
    – jfs
    Sep 4, 2014 at 12:33
  • @jfs No it doesn't - I just ran this and it printed 2018-07-12 13:46:17 UTC+0000, 2018-07-12 06:46:17 PDT-0700, and 2018-07-12 15:46:17 CEST+0200, all of which represent the same instant in time.
    – Mark Amery
    Jul 12, 2018 at 13:47
  • @MarkAmery: try to add microseconds to the fmt ("%f") to see that the time instances are different.
    – jfs
    Jul 12, 2018 at 17:31
  • 4
    @jfs Ah, I misunderstood your comment! I thought you were asserting that the moments represented completely different moments in time (i.e. hours apart), not just that they were separated by the few microseconds between the datetime.now(...) calls.
    – Mark Amery
    Jul 12, 2018 at 17:43
53

Python 3.9 adds the zoneinfo module so now only the the standard library is needed!

>>> from zoneinfo import ZoneInfo
>>> from datetime import datetime

>>> d = datetime(2020, 10, 31, 12, tzinfo=ZoneInfo('America/Los_Angeles'))
>>> d.astimezone(ZoneInfo('Europe/Berlin'))  # 12:00 in Cali will be 20:00 in Berlin
datetime.datetime(2020, 10, 31, 20, 0, tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo(key='Europe/Berlin'))

Wikipedia list of available time zones


Some functions such as now() and utcnow() return timezone-unaware datetimes, meaning they contain no timezone information. I recommend only requesting timezone-aware values from them using the keyword tz=ZoneInfo('localtime').

If astimezone gets a timezone-unaware input, it will assume it is local time, which can lead to errors:

>>> datetime.utcnow()  # UTC -- NOT timezone-aware!!
datetime.datetime(2020, 6, 1, 22, 39, 57, 376479)
>>> datetime.now()     # Local time -- NOT timezone-aware!!
datetime.datetime(2020, 6, 2, 0, 39, 57, 376675)

>>> datetime.now(tz=ZoneInfo('localtime'))  # timezone-aware
datetime.datetime(2020, 6, 2, 0, 39, 57, 376806, tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo(key='localtime'))
>>> datetime.now(tz=ZoneInfo('Europe/Berlin'))  # timezone-aware
datetime.datetime(2020, 6, 2, 0, 39, 57, 376937, tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo(key='Europe/Berlin'))
>>> datetime.utcnow().astimezone(ZoneInfo('Europe/Berlin'))  # WRONG!!
datetime.datetime(2020, 6, 1, 22, 39, 57, 377562, tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo(key='Europe/Berlin'))

Windows has no system time zone database, so here an extra package is needed:

pip install tzdata  

There is a backport to allow use in Python 3.6 to 3.8:

sudo pip install backports.zoneinfo

Then:

from backports.zoneinfo import ZoneInfo
4
  • How do you handle then the datetime.now(tz=ZoneInfo('localtime')) timezone-aware object? Example: ZoneInfoNotFoundError: 'No time zone found with key localtime'. Is localtimezone meant to be replaced? What to do with a EEST local timezone for example, which is unknown to zoneinfo? Jul 4, 2023 at 11:06
  • @NikosAlexandris You have to install tzdata as I described in my answer
    – xjcl
    Jul 5, 2023 at 8:53
  • Already installed. But I tried again, same error. Jul 6, 2023 at 17:43
  • 1
    @NikosAlexandris I can replicate your error, it looks like localtime is only available on Linux then. You could try from dateutil.tz import tzlocal as recommended in this thread (stackoverflow.com/q/2720319/2111778) or just pass an explicit time zone.
    – xjcl
    Jul 7, 2023 at 10:13
36
import datetime
import pytz

def convert_datetime_timezone(dt, tz1, tz2):
    tz1 = pytz.timezone(tz1)
    tz2 = pytz.timezone(tz2)

    dt = datetime.datetime.strptime(dt,"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
    dt = tz1.localize(dt)
    dt = dt.astimezone(tz2)
    dt = dt.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")

    return dt

-

  • dt: date time string
  • tz1: initial time zone
  • tz2: target time zone

-

> convert_datetime_timezone("2017-05-13 14:56:32", "Europe/Berlin", "PST8PDT")
'2017-05-13 05:56:32'

> convert_datetime_timezone("2017-05-13 14:56:32", "Europe/Berlin", "UTC")
'2017-05-13 12:56:32'

-

> pytz.all_timezones[0:10]
['Africa/Abidjan',
 'Africa/Accra',
 'Africa/Addis_Ababa',
 'Africa/Algiers',
 'Africa/Asmara',
 'Africa/Asmera',
 'Africa/Bamako',
 'Africa/Bangui',
 'Africa/Banjul',
 'Africa/Bissau']
1
  • Delete blank lines in the function so it will run in REPL
    – flywire
    Mar 1, 2022 at 22:42
21

Time conversion

To convert a time in one timezone to another timezone in Python, you could use datetime.astimezone():

so, below code is to convert the local time to other time zone.

  • datetime.datetime.today() - return current the local time
  • datetime.astimezone() - convert the time zone, but we have to pass the time zone.
  • pytz.timezone('Asia/Kolkata') -passing the time zone to pytz module
  • Strftime - Convert Datetime to string
# Time conversion from local time
import datetime
import pytz
dt_today = datetime.datetime.today()   # Local time
dt_India = dt_today.astimezone(pytz.timezone('Asia/Kolkata')) 
dt_London = dt_today.astimezone(pytz.timezone('Europe/London'))
India = (dt_India.strftime('%m/%d/%Y %H:%M'))
London = (dt_London.strftime('%m/%d/%Y %H:%M'))
print("Indian standard time: "+India+" IST")
print("British Summer Time: "+London+" BST")

List all the time zones

import pytz
for tz in pytz.all_timezones:
    print(tz)
12

To convert a time in one timezone to another timezone in Python, you could use datetime.astimezone():

time_in_new_timezone = time_in_old_timezone.astimezone(new_timezone)

Given aware_dt (a datetime object in some timezone), to convert it to other timezones and to print the times in a given time format:

#!/usr/bin/env python3
import pytz  # $ pip install pytz

time_format = "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S%z"
tzids = ['Asia/Shanghai', 'Europe/London', 'America/New_York']
for tz in map(pytz.timezone, tzids):
    time_in_tz = aware_dt.astimezone(tz)
    print(f"{time_in_tz:{time_format}}")

If f"" syntax is unavailable, you could replace it with "".format(**vars())

where you could set aware_dt from the current time in the local timezone:

from datetime import datetime
import tzlocal  # $ pip install tzlocal

local_timezone = tzlocal.get_localzone()
aware_dt = datetime.now(local_timezone) # the current time

Or from the input time string in the local timezone:

naive_dt = datetime.strptime(time_string, time_format)
aware_dt = local_timezone.localize(naive_dt, is_dst=None)

where time_string could look like: '2016-11-19 02:21:42'. It corresponds to time_format = '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'.

is_dst=None forces an exception if the input time string corresponds to a non-existing or ambiguous local time such as during a DST transition. You could also pass is_dst=False, is_dst=True. See links with more details at Python: How do you convert datetime/timestamp from one timezone to another timezone?

7

For Python timezone conversions, I use the handy table from the PyCon 2012 presentation by Taavi Burns.

6

Please note: The first part of this answer is or version 1.x of pendulum. See below for a version 2.x answer.

I hope I'm not too late!

The pendulum library excels at this and other date-time calculations.

>>> import pendulum
>>> some_time_zones = ['Europe/Paris', 'Europe/Moscow', 'America/Toronto', 'UTC', 'Canada/Pacific', 'Asia/Macao']
>>> heres_a_time = '1996-03-25 12:03 -0400'
>>> pendulum_time = pendulum.datetime.strptime(heres_a_time, '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M %z')
>>> for tz in some_time_zones:
...     tz, pendulum_time.astimezone(tz)
...     
('Europe/Paris', <Pendulum [1996-03-25T17:03:00+01:00]>)
('Europe/Moscow', <Pendulum [1996-03-25T19:03:00+03:00]>)
('America/Toronto', <Pendulum [1996-03-25T11:03:00-05:00]>)
('UTC', <Pendulum [1996-03-25T16:03:00+00:00]>)
('Canada/Pacific', <Pendulum [1996-03-25T08:03:00-08:00]>)
('Asia/Macao', <Pendulum [1996-03-26T00:03:00+08:00]>)

Answer lists the names of the time zones that may be used with pendulum. (They're the same as for pytz.)

For version 2:

  • some_time_zones is a list of the names of the time zones that might be used in a program
  • heres_a_time is a sample time, complete with a time zone in the form '-0400'
  • I begin by converting the time to a pendulum time for subsequent processing
  • now I can show what this time is in each of the time zones in show_time_zones

...

>>> import pendulum
>>> some_time_zones = ['Europe/Paris', 'Europe/Moscow', 'America/Toronto', 'UTC', 'Canada/Pacific', 'Asia/Macao']
>>> heres_a_time = '1996-03-25 12:03 -0400'
>>> pendulum_time = pendulum.from_format('1996-03-25 12:03 -0400', 'YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm ZZ')
>>> for tz in some_time_zones:
...     tz, pendulum_time.in_tz(tz)
...     
('Europe/Paris', DateTime(1996, 3, 25, 17, 3, 0, tzinfo=Timezone('Europe/Paris')))
('Europe/Moscow', DateTime(1996, 3, 25, 19, 3, 0, tzinfo=Timezone('Europe/Moscow')))
('America/Toronto', DateTime(1996, 3, 25, 11, 3, 0, tzinfo=Timezone('America/Toronto')))
('UTC', DateTime(1996, 3, 25, 16, 3, 0, tzinfo=Timezone('UTC')))
('Canada/Pacific', DateTime(1996, 3, 25, 8, 3, 0, tzinfo=Timezone('Canada/Pacific')))
('Asia/Macao', DateTime(1996, 3, 26, 0, 3, 0, tzinfo=Timezone('Asia/Macao')))
2
  • AttributeError: 'function' object has no attribute 'strptime' Sep 3, 2018 at 0:07
  • 1
    Pendulum is amazing, but keep in mind the output might not be compatible with whatever you want to do next, for example Pandas dataframes.
    – Turanga1
    Mar 10, 2019 at 13:41
4

For Python 3.2+ simple-date is a wrapper around pytz that tries to simplify things.

If you have a time then

SimpleDate(time).convert(tz="...")

may do what you want. But timezones are quite complex things, so it can get significantly more complicated - see the the docs.

3
# Program
import time
import os

os.environ['TZ'] = 'US/Eastern'
time.tzset()
print('US/Eastern in string form:',time.asctime()) 

os.environ['TZ'] = 'Australia/Melbourne'
time.tzset()
print('Australia/Melbourne in string form:',time.asctime())

os.environ['TZ'] = 'Asia/Kolkata'
time.tzset()
print('Asia/Kolkata in string form:',time.asctime()) 
2
  • 5
    Hi and welcome to Stack Overflow! Please read How to Answer and always remember that you are not only answering to the OP, but also to any future readers of this question, especially given that this one is already 8 years old. Please edit your post to contain some explanation as to why this would work.
    – Adriaan
    Aug 14, 2020 at 11:40
  • @Sahil Soni - Please provide answers with proper descriptions and explanations Aug 14, 2020 at 11:51

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