I am unclear about the exact format to have a link on a website that will add a single event to a users Google calendar. I see that eventbrite has done it here but I would love some clear specs or links in the right direction
4 Answers
Here's an example link you can use to see the format:
Note the key query parameters:
text
dates
details
location
Here's another example (taken from http://wordpress.org/support/topic/direct-link-to-add-specific-google-calendar-event):
<a href="http://www.google.com/calendar/render?
action=TEMPLATE
&text=[event-title]
&dates=[start-custom format='Ymd\\THi00\\Z']/[end-custom format='Ymd\\THi00\\Z']
&details=[description]
&location=[location]
&trp=false
&sprop=
&sprop=name:"
target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Add to my calendar</a>
Here's a form which will help you construct such a link if you want (mentioned in earlier answers):
https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/3033039 Edit: This link no longer gives you a form you can use
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36Note you can also specify a time zone parameter e.g.:
ctz=America/New_York
– UserFeb 28, 2014 at 15:27 -
32To convert to the datetime format:
(new Date()).toISOString().replace(/-|:|\.\d\d\d/g,"");
Dec 30, 2014 at 10:36 -
8The link above is good for desktop. For mobile similar url is calendar.google.com/calendar/gp#~calendar:view=e&bm=1 and parameters are the same. Feb 26, 2016 at 8:39
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8You can find a complete list of CTZ values at List of tz database time zones May 26, 2016 at 13:03
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9@IvánSánchez late reply but, the 'Z' at the end of the 'dates' param will set the equivalent time in UTC - so will likely be wrong for your time zone. Drop the 'Z' at the end of each date and you'll find the time showing up in the right zone.
dates=20140127T224000/20140320T221500
Mar 15, 2018 at 15:16
There is a comprehensive doc for google calendar and other calendar services: https://github.com/InteractionDesignFoundation/add-event-to-calendar-docs/blob/master/services/google.md
An example of working link: https://calendar.google.com/calendar/render?action=TEMPLATE&text=Bithday&dates=20201231T193000Z/20201231T223000Z&details=With%20clowns%20and%20stuff&location=North%20Pole
I've also been successful with this URL structure:
Base URL:
https://calendar.google.com/calendar/r/eventedit?
And let's say this is my event details:
Title: Event Title
Description: Example of some description. See more at https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10488831/link-to-add-to-google-calendar
Location: 123 Some Place
Date: February 22, 2020
Start Time: 10:00am
End Time: 11:30am
Timezone: America/New York (GMT -5)
I'd convert my details into these parameters (URL encoded):
text=Event%20Title
details=Example%20of%20some%20description.%20See%20more%20at%20https%3A%2F%2Fstackoverflow.com%2Fquestions%2F10488831%2Flink-to-add-to-google-calendar
location=123%20Some%20Place%2C%20City
dates=20200222T100000/20200222T113000
ctz=America%2FNew_York
Example link:
Please note that since I've specified a timezone with the "ctz" parameter, I used the local times for the start and end dates. Alternatively, you can use UTC dates and exclude the timezone parameter, like this:
dates=20200222T150000Z/20200222T163000Z
Example link:
For the next person Googling this topic, I've written a small NPM package to make it simple to generate Google Calendar URLs. It includes TypeScript type definitions, for those who need that. Hope it helps!
23/02/21
and this app seems to be very knowledgeable, so perhaps the syntax he suggests is worth considering amongst all the other options posted here, here and here.