26

Is there a program or a table that provides the default timezone for every country?

Yes, the US, Canada, & Russia have multiple timezones. (I think every other country has just one.) But it's better to start on the most likely if a country is known rather than just provide a list starting at GMT.

Preferably in C# but I'll take it in anything and convert to C#.

26
  • 3
    China. India. Iran. Brazil.... Oct 30, 2013 at 23:01
  • What is a "default timezone"??? The zone in with the capital of a country?
    – user2819245
    Oct 30, 2013 at 23:03
  • 1
    And Australia with at least three timezones, and some states, but not all, have daylight saving time, and Indiana in the US which uses at least two time zones.
    – user1864610
    Oct 30, 2013 at 23:03
  • Questions asking us to recommend or find a tool, library or favorite off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it.
    – user1864610
    Oct 30, 2013 at 23:04
  • @Andrew, fun fact: China has indeed only one timezone. Crazy, if you think about the size of that country. But Mongolia has two, that should balance it ;)
    – user2819245
    Oct 30, 2013 at 23:08

6 Answers 6

34

As identified in the comments of the question, you aren't going to be able to get a single time zone for each country. There are just too many cases of countries that have multiple time zones.

What you can do is filter the list of standard IANA/Olson time zones down to those available within a specific country.

One way to do this in C# is with Noda Time:

IEnumerable<string> zoneIds = TzdbDateTimeZoneSource.Default.ZoneLocations
    .Where(x => x.CountryCode == countryCode)
    .Select(x => x.ZoneId);

Pass a two-digit ISO-3166 country code, such as "AU" for Australia. The results are:

"Australia/Lord_Howe",
"Australia/Hobart",
"Australia/Currie",
"Australia/Melbourne",
"Australia/Sydney",
"Australia/Broken_Hill",
"Australia/Brisbane",
"Australia/Lindeman",
"Australia/Adelaide",
"Australia/Darwin",
"Australia/Perth",
"Australia/Eucla"

And if for some reason you'd like Windows time zone identifiers that you can use with the TimeZoneInfo object, Noda Time can map those too:

var source = TzdbDateTimeZoneSource.Default;
IEnumerable<string> windowsZoneIds = source.ZoneLocations
    .Where(x => x.CountryCode == countryCode)
    .Select(tz => source.WindowsMapping.MapZones
        .FirstOrDefault(x => x.TzdbIds.Contains(
                             source.CanonicalIdMap.First(y => y.Value == tz.ZoneId).Key)))
    .Where(x => x != null)
    .Select(x => x.WindowsId)
    .Distinct()

Again, called with "AU" for Australia returns:

"Tasmania Standard Time",
"AUS Eastern Standard Time",
"Cen. Australia Standard Time",
"E. Australia Standard Time",
"AUS Central Standard Time",
"W. Australia Standard Time"

If you're wondering about how reliable this data is, the country to tzid mapping is part of the IANA time zone database itself, in the zone.tab file. The IANA to Windows mapping data comes from the Unicode CLDR supplemental data. It doesn't get any closer to "official" than that.

7
  • Could you try the same for FO country code? (Faroi Islands) I can find the code in file (zone.tab) but in C# I am getting no results for this code..
    – Alex
    Jul 1, 2016 at 21:32
  • Try the edit I just made. I hadn't taken into account the IDs in the windows mapping are not always the TZDB canonical ones. Jul 2, 2016 at 2:33
  • For windows time zone, it does not work for all cases, for example HR.
    – Umair
    Apr 28, 2019 at 16:07
  • This produces redundant time zones. For example, the United States only has 3-4 time zones but this returns 29 time zones, many of which are the same time zone!
    – A X
    Dec 29, 2019 at 1:49
  • Hello I found that the code doesn't work for country with code "AX" so here id my take on your solution: IEnumerable<TzdbZoneLocation> ZoneIds = source.ZoneLocations.Where(key => key.CountryCode == countryCode); IReadOnlyDictionary<string, string> WindowsZoneIDs = source.TzdbToWindowsIds; List<string> Timezones = new(); foreach (var timezone in ZoneIds) { if (WindowsZoneIDs.ContainsKey(timezone.ZoneId)) Timezones.Add(WindowsZoneIDs[timezone.ZoneId]); } var TimezonesDistinct = Timezones.Distinct();
    – Abo Ali
    Nov 8, 2022 at 9:42
4

May not be exactly what you are looking for, but try this: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.timezoneinfo.aspx

To get a specific time zone:

TimeZoneInfo tZone = TimeZoneInfo.FindSystemTimeZoneById("E. Australia Standard Time");

To see the available zones:

ReadOnlyCollection<TimeZoneInfo> zones = TimeZoneInfo.GetSystemTimeZones();

foreach (TimeZoneInfo zone in zones)
{
     Console.WriteLine(zone.Id);
}
4

In order to get CountryCode -> TimeZoneInfo mapping i used answer from Matt (2nd code snippet), but it didn't work for many cases. Found simpler and more reliable solution (using same Noda Time): TzdbDateTimeZoneSource.Default.WindowsMapping.MapZones basically has all the data.

Code sample:

Dictionary<string, TimeZoneInfo> GetIsoToTimeZoneMapping()
{
    var source = TzdbDateTimeZoneSource.Default;

    return source.WindowsMapping.MapZones
        .GroupBy(z => z.Territory)
        .ToDictionary(grp => grp.Key, grp => GetTimeZone(source, grp));
}

 TimeZoneInfo GetTimeZone(TzdbDateTimeZoneSource source, IEnumerable<MapZone> territoryLocations)
{
    var result = territoryLocations
        .Select(l => l.WindowsId)
        .Select(TimeZoneInfo.FindSystemTimeZoneById)
        //pick timezone with the minimum offset
        .Aggregate((tz1, tz2) => tz1.BaseUtcOffset < tz2.BaseUtcOffset ? tz1 : tz2);

    return result;
}
1

Latest Windows versions contain file %WINDIR%\Globalization\Time Zone\timezoneMapping.xml which maps Olson to Windows time zone, you can query it as regular XML. I don't know but maybe C# already has a class which works with it.

1
1

Some countries have more as one timezone for example russia.

In my solution i use NodaTime if you have a longitude information available i select the best timezone for this country.

var countryName = "Russia";
var longitude = 40.332206;

var zones = TzdbDateTimeZoneSource.Default.ZoneLocations.Where(x => x.CountryName == countryName).AsQueryable();
if (!double.IsNaN(longitude))
{
    zones = zones.OrderBy(o => this.Distance(o.Latitude, longitude, o.Latitude, o.Longitude, DistanceUnit.Kilometer));
}
var bestZone = zones.FirstOrDefault();
var dateTimeZone = TzdbDateTimeZoneSource.Default.ForId(bestZone.ZoneId);

var newTime = DateTime.UtcNow.AddSeconds(dateTimeZone.MaxOffset.Seconds);

Calculate distance of geo coordinates

public enum DistanceUnit { StatuteMile, Kilometer, NauticalMile };

private double Distance(double lat1, double lon1, double lat2, double lon2, DistanceUnit unit)
{
    double rlat1 = Math.PI * lat1 / 180;
    double rlat2 = Math.PI * lat2 / 180;
    double theta = lon1 - lon2;
    double rtheta = Math.PI * theta / 180;
    double dist =
        Math.Sin(rlat1) * Math.Sin(rlat2) + Math.Cos(rlat1) *
        Math.Cos(rlat2) * Math.Cos(rtheta);
    dist = Math.Acos(dist);
    dist = dist * 180 / Math.PI;
    dist = dist * 60 * 1.1515;

    switch (unit)
    {
        case DistanceUnit.Kilometer:
            return dist * 1.609344;
        case DistanceUnit.NauticalMile:
            return dist * 0.8684;
        default:
        case DistanceUnit.StatuteMile: //Miles
            return dist;
    }
}
0

I've used the per-country default timezones that Microsoft uses for Windows when a user first logs in. They list them at https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/manufacture/desktop/default-time-zones.

I also created a script which parses that table out into a JSON file at https://github.com/rahulgi/default-timezones.

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