How can I gather the visitor's time zone information?
I need both:
- the time zone (for example, Europe/London)
- and the offset from UTC or GMT (for example, UTC+01)
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How can I gather the visitor's time zone information?
I need both:
getTimezoneOffset()
You can get the time zone offset in minutes like this:
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();
console.log(offset);
// if offset equals -60 then the time zone offset is UTC+01
The time-zone offset is the difference, in minutes, between UTC and local time. Note that this means that the offset is positive if the local timezone is behind UTC and negative if it is ahead. For example, if your time zone is UTC+10 (Australian Eastern Standard Time), -600 will be returned. Daylight savings time prevents this value from being a constant even for a given locale
Note that not all timezones are offset by whole hours: for example, Newfoundland is UTC minus 3h 30m (leaving Daylight Saving Time out of the equation).
Please also note that this only gives you the time zone offset (eg: UTC+01), it does not give you the time zone (eg: Europe/London).
getTimezoneOffset
inaccuracy in effect? The article you are referring to is dated of June 2007 and has no details of how the function is inaccurate. And in fact the library jsTimezoneDetect
you pointed uses getTimezoneOffset
itself.
– Mike
Nov 15 '13 at 17:03
var hrs = -(new Date().getTimezoneOffset() / 60)
to get offset in hours typically used
– Edwin Daniels
May 1 '15 at 18:20
Using an offset to calculate Timezone is a wrong approach, and you will always encounter problems. Time zones and daylight saving rules may change on several occasions during a year, and It's difficult to keep up with changes.
To get the system's IANA timezone in JavaScript, you should use
console.log(Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone)
ecma-402/1.0 says that timeZone
may be undefined if not provided to constructor. However, future draft (3.0) fixed that issue by changing to system default timezone.
In this version of the ECMAScript Internationalization API, the
timeZone
property will remain undefined if notimeZone
property was provided in the options object provided to theIntl.DateTimeFormat
constructor. However, applications should not rely on this, as future versions may return a String value identifying the host environment’s current time zone instead.
in ecma-402/3.0 which is still in a draft it changed to
In this version of the ECMAScript 2015 Internationalization API, the
timeZone
property will be the name of the default time zone if notimeZone
property was provided in the options object provided to theIntl.DateTimeFormat
constructor. The previous version left thetimeZone
property undefined in this case.
I realize this answer is a bit off topic but I imagine many of us looking for an answer also wanted to format the time zone for display and perhaps get the zone abbreviation too. So here it goes...
If you want the client timezone nicely formatted you can rely on the JavaScript Date.toString method and do:
var split = new Date().toString().split(" ");
var timeZoneFormatted = split[split.length - 2] + " " + split[split.length - 1];
This will give you "GMT-0400 (EST)" for example, including the timezone minutes when applicable.
Alternatively, with regex you can extract any desired part:
For "GMT-0400 (EDT)" :
new Date().toString().match(/([A-Z]+[\+-][0-9]+.*)/)[1]
For "GMT-0400" :
new Date().toString().match(/([A-Z]+[\+-][0-9]+)/)[1]
For just "EDT" :
new Date().toString().match(/\(([A-Za-z\s].*)\)/)[1]
For just "-0400":
new Date().toString().match(/([-\+][0-9]+)\s/)[1]
Date.toString reference: https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date/toString
EDIT 10/6/2020 - The above solution may not work in all browsers and locales. My present recommendation is to utilize a library. Some good popular libraries are: moment, date-fns 2, luxon or dayjs.
split[4] + " " + split[5]
?!
– Christophe Roussy
Oct 22 '13 at 9:09
var fullTz = new Date().toString().match(/\(([A-Za-z\s].*)\)/)[1]; var parts = fullTz.split(' '); var tz = ""; parts.forEach(function (element, index, array) { tz += element.substring(0, 1); });
yields: "EST", for example
– tntwyckoff
Jun 15 '16 at 4:29
new Date().toString()
is completely dependant on your locale settings. Expecting other clients' outputs to resemble yours is a very bad idea.
– Octopus
Oct 12 '17 at 21:22
It's already been answered how to get offset in minutes as an integer, but in case anyone wants the local GMT offset as a string e.g. "+1130"
:
function pad(number, length){
var str = "" + number
while (str.length < length) {
str = '0'+str
}
return str
}
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset()
offset = ((offset<0? '+':'-')+ // Note the reversed sign!
pad(parseInt(Math.abs(offset/60)), 2)+
pad(Math.abs(offset%60), 2))
pad(parseInt(Math.abs(offset/60)), 2)
to get it right... else you might end up getting +5.530 as in my case... i m not sure if math floor etc will be a better thing here or not.... but this atleast gives me +0530 as expected
– Abhinav Singh
Jun 30 '12 at 16:16
You can use:
<script src="moment.js"></script>
<script src="moment-timezone-with-data.js"></script>
// retrieve timezone by name (i.e. "America/Chicago")
moment.tz.guess();
Browser time zone detection is rather tricky to get right, as there is little information provided by the browser.
Moment Timezone uses Date.getTimezoneOffset()
and Date.toString()
on a handful of moments around the current year to gather as much information about the browser environment as possible. It then compares that information with all the time zone data loaded and returns the closest match. In case of ties, the time zone with the city with largest population is returned.
console.log(moment.tz.guess()); // America/Chicago
I wrote a function in my project, which returns the timezone in hh:mm
format. I hope this may help someone:
function getTimeZone() {
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset(), o = Math.abs(offset);
return (offset < 0 ? "+" : "-") + ("00" + Math.floor(o / 60)).slice(-2) + ":" + ("00" + (o % 60)).slice(-2);
}
// Outputs: +5:00
function getTimeZone() {
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset(), o = Math.abs(offset);
return (offset < 0 ? "+" : "-") + ("00" + Math.floor(o / 60)).slice(-2) + ":" + ("00" + (o % 60)).slice(-2);
}
// See output
document.write(getTimeZone());
A one-liner that gives both the offset and the time zone is to simply call toTimeString() on a new Date object. From MDN:
The
toTimeString()
method returns the time portion of a Date object in human readable form in American English.
The catch is that the timezone is not in the standard IANA format; it's somewhat more user-friendly, than the "continent/city" IANA format. Try it out:
console.log(new Date().toTimeString().slice(9));
console.log(Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone);
console.log(new Date().getTimezoneOffset() / -60);
In California right now, toTimeString()
returns Pacific Daylight Time
while the Intl API returns America/Los_Angeles
. In Colombia, you'd get Colombia Standard Time
, vs. America/Bogota
.
Note that many other answers to this question attempt to obtain the same information by calling Date.toString(). That approach is not that reliable, as MDN explains:
Date instances refer to a specific point in time. Calling toString() will return the date formatted in a human readable form in American English. [...] Sometimes it is desirable to obtain a string of the time portion; such a thing can be accomplished with the
toTimeString()
method.The
toTimeString()
method is especially useful because compliant engines implementing ECMA-262 may differ in the string obtained fromtoString()
forDate
objects, as the format is implementation-dependent; simple string slicing approaches may not produce consistent results across multiple engines.
try getTimezoneOffset()
of the Date
object:
var curdate = new Date()
var offset = curdate.getTimezoneOffset()
This method returns time zone offset in minutes which is the difference between GMT and local time in minutes.
JavaScript:
var d = new Date();
var n = d.getTimezoneOffset();
var timezone = n / -60;
console.log(timezone);
With moment.js:
moment().format('zz');
z
and zz
have been deprecated as of 1.6.0 see momentjs.com/docs/#/displaying/format
– MrUpsidown
Sep 25 '14 at 13:12
With momentjs, you can find current timezone as
console.log(moment().utcOffset()); // (-240, -120, -60, 0, 60, 120, 240, etc.)
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/momentjs/2.13.0/moment.min.js"></script>
With dayjs, you can find current timezone as
console.log(dayjs().utcOffset()); // (-240, -120, -60, 0, 60, 120, 240, etc.)
<script src="https://unpkg.com/dayjs@1.8.10/dayjs.min.js"></script>
Both API returns utc offset in minutes.
getTimezoneOffset()
.
– Dan Dascalescu
Mar 20 '19 at 3:31
Timezone in hours-
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();
if(offset<0)
console.log( "Your timezone is- GMT+" + (offset/-60));
else
console.log( "Your timezone is- GMT-" + offset/60);
If you want to be precise as you mentioned in comment, then you should try like this-
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();
if(offset<0)
{
var extraZero = "";
if(-offset%60<10)
extraZero="0";
console.log( "Your timezone is- GMT+" + Math.ceil(offset/-60)+":"+extraZero+(-offset%60));
}
else
{
var extraZero = "";
if(offset%60<10)
extraZero="0";
console.log( "Your timezone is- GMT-" + Math.floor(offset/60)+":"+extraZero+(offset%60));
}
See this resultant operator was opposite to the Timezone .So apply some math function then validate the num less or more.
var a = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();
var res = -Math.round(a/60)+':'+-(a%60);
res = res < 0 ?res : '+'+res;
console.log(res)
function getLocalTimeZone() {
var dd = new Date();
var ddStr = dd.toString();
var ddArr = ddStr.split(' ');
var tmznSTr = ddArr[5];
tmznSTr = tmznSTr.substring(3, tmznSTr.length);
return tmznSTr;
}
Example : Thu Jun 21 2018 18:12:50 GMT+0530 (India Standard Time)
O/P : +0530
Date.toString()
is not reliable, and MDN explains why. I've pasted the relevant section from their docs in my answer.
– Dan Dascalescu
Mar 17 '19 at 6:39
Try this,
new Date().toString().split("GMT")[1].split(" (")[0]
Try this :
new Date().toLocaleString("en-US",Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone)
This will look for timeZone on your client's browser.
If all you need is the "MST" or the "EST" time zone abbreviation:
function getTimeZone(){
var now = new Date().toString();
var timeZone = now.replace(/.*[(](.*)[)].*/,'$1');//extracts the content between parenthesis
return timeZone;
}
console.log(getTimeZone());
Date.toString()
is not reliable, and MDN explains why. I've pasted the relevant section from their docs in my answer.
– Dan Dascalescu
Mar 17 '19 at 6:39
This value is from user's machine and it can be changed anytime so I think it doesn't matter, I just want to get an approximate value and then convert it to GMT in my server.
For example, I am from Taiwan and it returns "+8" for me.
JS
function timezone() {
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();
var minutes = Math.abs(offset);
var hours = Math.floor(minutes / 60);
var prefix = offset < 0 ? "+" : "-";
return prefix+hours;
}
$('#result').html(timezone());
HTML
<div id="result"></div>
Result
+8
On the new Date(
) you can get the offset, to get the timezone name you may do:
new Date().toString().replace(/(.*\((.*)\).*)/, '$2');
you get the value between ()
in the end of the date, that is the name of the timezone.
Date.toString()
is not reliable, and MDN explains why. I've pasted the relevant section from their docs in my answer. Also, this answer has been given at least 3 times already.
– Dan Dascalescu
Mar 17 '19 at 6:40
This would be my solution:
// For time zone:
const timeZone = /\((.*)\)/.exec(new Date().toString())[1];
// Offset hours:
const offsetHours = new Date().getTimezoneOffset() / 60;
console.log(`${timeZone}, ${offsetHours}hrs`);
As an alternative to new Date().getTimezoneOffset()
and moment().format('zz')
, you can also use momentjs:
var offset = moment.parseZone(Date.now()).utcOffset() / 60
console.log(offset);
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/momentjs/2.13.0/moment.min.js"></script>
jstimezone is also quite buggy and unmaintained (https://bitbucket.org/pellepim/jstimezonedetect/issues?status=new&status=open)
Use this to convert OffSet to postive:
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();
console.log(offset);
this.timeOffSet = offset + (-2*offset);
console.log(this.timeOffSet);
If you just want the timezone (like IST, GMT, etc.), then use this:
var timezone = new Date().toString().match(/\(([A-Za-z\s].*)\)/)[1];
var parts = timezone.split(' ');
var tz = "";
parts.forEach(function (element) { tz += element.substring(0, 1); });
Once I had this "simple" task and I used (new Date()).getTimezoneOffset()
- the approach that is widely suggested here. But it turned out that the solution wasn't quite right.
For some undocumented reasons in my case new Date()
was returning GMT+0200 when new Date(0)
was returning GMT+0300 which was right. Since then I always use
(new Date(0)).getTimezoneOffset()
to get a correct timeshift.
You just to to include moment.js and jstz.js
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment.js/2.17.1/moment.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jstimezonedetect/1.0.6/jstz.min.js"></script>
and after that
<script>
$(function(){
var currentTimezone = jstz.determine();
var timezone = currentTimezone.name();
alert(timezone);
});
</script>
This is very good work for me:
// Translation to offset in Unix Timestamp
let timeZoneOffset = ((new Date().getTimezoneOffset())/60)*3600;
you can simply try this. it will return you current machine time
var _d = new Date(), t = 0, d = new Date(t*1000 + _d.getTime())
new Date(new Date().getTime());
it would display: "Fri Dec 28 2018 10:15:23 GMT+0100 (Central European Standard Time) {}"
– darmis
Dec 28 '18 at 9:17
This will do the job.
var time = new Date(),
timestamp = Date(1000 + time.getTime());
console.log(timestamp);
Thu May 25 2017 21:35:14 GMT+0300 (IDT)
undefined