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I want to get the default timezone (PST) of my system from Python. What's the best way to do that? I'd like to avoid forking another process.

1

10 Answers 10

152

This should work:

import time
time.tzname

time.tzname returns a tuple of two strings: The first is the name of the local non-DST timezone, the second is the name of the local DST timezone.

Example return: ('MST', 'MDT')

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  • 47
    To take this one further, you can use time.tzname[time.daylight] to get the name of the current timezone, accounting for daylight saving time.
    – Dan Breen
    Aug 31, 2012 at 14:51
  • 37
    Again, 'time.daylight' does not indicate that DST is active. It merely indicates whether or not DST is observed by the timezone. You're looking for 'time.localtime().tm_isdst'.
    – marr75
    Nov 21, 2013 at 16:11
  • 1
    Just to add for Windows users, the values for timezone was defined in `HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Time Zones`
    – swdev
    Apr 4, 2014 at 14:34
  • 5
    time.tzname may return a wrong value if the local timezone had different abbreviations in the past (Python uses values from January, July or the current (import/tzset() time) value). tzlocal module could be used to get the correct tzname for a given date.
    – jfs
    Jan 13, 2015 at 9:56
  • 6
    is there a way to get the name? like Asia/Tehran ?
    – senaps
    Sep 25, 2017 at 6:13
42

I found this to work well:

import datetime
tz_string = datetime.datetime.now(datetime.timezone.utc).astimezone().tzname()

For me this was able to differentiate between daylight savings and not.

From Python 3.6 you can do:

tz_string = datetime.datetime.now().astimezone().tzname()

Or

tz_string = datetime.datetime.now().astimezone().tzinfo

Reference with more detail: https://stackoverflow.com/a/39079819/4549682

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  • 1
    as from python 3.6 you can just write tz_string = datetime.datetime.now().astimezone().tzname() Also if you want to get more than just the timezone's name you can use: datetime.now().astimezone().tzinfo
    – gelonida
    Aug 27, 2022 at 21:18
41

Gives a UTC offset like in ThomasH's answer, but takes daylight savings into account.

>>> import time
>>> offset = time.timezone if (time.localtime().tm_isdst == 0) else time.altzone
>>> offset / 60 / 60 * -1
-9

The value of time.timezone or time.altzone is in seconds West of UTC (with areas East of UTC getting a negative value). This is the opposite to how we'd actually like it, hence the * -1.

time.localtime().tm_isdst will be zero if daylight savings is currently not in effect (although this may not be correct if an area has recently changed their daylight savings law).

EDIT: marr75 is correct, I've edited the answer accordingly.

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  • 3
    To be safe, I think the offset check should be reversed (altzone if dst = 1 else timezone). If DST status is somehow unknown, tm_isdst will be -1, and the current code would default to altzone in this case. For regions that don't use DST, this value is never correct, so timezone should probably be the fallback. (I'm not sure if -1 is actually possible output from localtime though)
    – nmclean
    Sep 11, 2014 at 13:14
  • 2
31

Check out the Python Time Module.

from time import gmtime, strftime
print(strftime("%z", gmtime()))

Pacific Standard Time

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  • 11
    but produce different output. Jul 10, 2009 at 22:20
  • 4
    >>> from time import gmtime, strftime >>> print strftime('%z', gmtime()) Pacific Standard Time >>> print strftime('%Z', gmtime()) Pacific Standard Time I disagree.
    – ahawker
    Jul 10, 2009 at 23:23
  • 3
    Also check out dateutil and tzlocal that helps with this. %z (and %Z) produce non-standard, ambiguous platform dependent strings that aren't very useful. Aug 2, 2013 at 13:16
  • 6
    In Python 2.7 on Linux, %Z produces TZ acronym eg. CET, while %z produces offset, eg. +0100
    – vartec
    Nov 7, 2013 at 15:48
  • 2
    This gave me the wrong timezone (again, GMT) in Python 2, but the correct one in Python 3.
    – zondo
    Nov 12, 2016 at 3:52
12

The code snippets for calculating offset are incorrect, see http://bugs.python.org/issue7229.

The correct way to handle this is:

def local_time_offset(t=None):
    """Return offset of local zone from GMT, either at present or at time t."""
    # python2.3 localtime() can't take None
    if t is None:
        t = time.time()

    if time.localtime(t).tm_isdst and time.daylight:
        return -time.altzone
    else:
        return -time.timezone

This is in all likelihood, not the exact question that the OP asked, but there are two incorrect snippets on the page and time bugs suck to track down and fix.

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12

For Python 3.6+ this can be easily achieved by following code:

import datetime
local_timezone = datetime.datetime.utcnow().astimezone().tzinfo

print(local_timezone)

But with Python < 3.6 calling astimezone() on naive datetime doesn't work. So we've to do it in a slightly different way.

So for Python 3.x,

import datetime
local_timezone = datetime.datetime.now(datetime.timezone.utc).astimezone().tzinfo

print(local_timezone)

Sample Output:
On Netherlands Server(Python 3.6.9): CEST
On Bangladesh Server(Python 3.8.2): +06

More details can be found on this thread.

4

To obtain timezone information in the form of a datetime.tzinfo object, use dateutil.tz.tzlocal():

from dateutil import tz
myTimeZone = tz.tzlocal()

This object can be used in the tz parameter of datetime.datetime.now():

from datetime import datetime
from dateutil import tz
localisedDatetime = datetime.now(tz = tz.tzlocal())

or the tz parameter of datetime object via datetime.datetime.astimezone():

from datetime import datetime
from dateutil import tz
unlocalisedDatetime = datetime.now()
localisedDatetime = unlocalisedDatetime.astimezone(tz = tz.tzlocal())
3
import tzlocal
tz_info = tzlocal.get_localzone() # 'US/Central' or 'Asia/Calcutta'
dt = datetime.now()        # 2023-01-15 15:17:24.412430
print(tz_info.localize(dt) # 2023-01-15 15:17:24.412430-06:00

with tzlocal we will be able to get the local timezone.

0
2

Getting offset from UTC as timedelta:

from datetime import datetime, timezone

now = datetime.now()
now.replace(tzinfo=timezone.utc) - now.astimezone(timezone.utc)

Or like this (more obscure but also works):

datetime.now(timezone.utc).astimezone().tzinfo.utcoffset(None)

Both solutions give the same result. For example: datetime.timedelta(seconds=7200)

1

The problem is there are multiple time zone formats, namely:

  1. IANA Time Zone Database: "TZ Identifier" (e.g. "Africa/Addis_Ababa")
  2. IANA Time Zone Database: "abbreviation" (e.g. "EAT")
  3. Microsoft Time Zone Index (e.g. "E. Africa Standard Time")
  4. UTC offset (e.g. "+03:00" or "UTC+03:00")
  5. The ISO 3166-1 country codes are sometimes also used to reference time zones but these do not map cleanly (e.g. "ET", "ETH", or 231)

Here's how to get all time zones and the system time zone, in all these formats:

Database Name Example List all time zones Get system time zone
IANA Time Zone Identifiers 'Asia/Bangkok' import zoneinfo as zi; zi.available_timezones() or pytz.all_timezones import tzlocal as tzl; str(tzl.get_localzone())
IANA Time Zone Abbreviations 'ICT' In Python I'm not sure how; see the IANA wiki page for a list See this answer
Microsoft Time Zone Index 'SE Asia Standard Time' ** Note 1 time.tzname[0]
Time zone offset '+07:00' N/A ** Note 2

** Note 1: in Powershell,

[System.TimeZoneInfo]::GetSystemTimeZones()

** Note 2: in Python,

iana_tz = str(tzlocal.get_localzone())
pytz_tz = pytz.timezone(iana_tz)
offset_str = datetime.datetime.now().astimezone(pytz_tz).strftime("%z")
offset_str = offset_str[:3] + ':' + offset_str[3:]

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