546

From the server I get a datetime variable in this format: 6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM and it is in UTC time. I want to convert it to the current user’s browser time zone using JavaScript.

How this can be done using JavaScript or jQuery?

4
  • 7
    Be careful. That's a weird date format, so be sure to specify it in whatever solution you use. If possible, get the server to send the date in ISO format. Jan 10, 2017 at 4:00
  • Hello, I had similar problems, I solved it by converting the date/time, before sending to the server, using: var date = new Date('2020-11-06T01:30:00.000Z'); console.log(date.toLocaleDateString()); console.log(date.toLocaleString()); console.log(date.toLocaleTimeString());
    – FXLima
    Sep 21, 2022 at 17:49
  • My comment is to Example: (UTC Brazil) I typed "15**/12/2020 **22:30:00" and it sent: '2020-12-16T01:30:00.000Z'.
    – FXLima
    Sep 21, 2022 at 18:01

39 Answers 39

1
2
0

In Angular I used Ben's answer this way:

$scope.convert = function (thedate) {
    var tempstr = thedate.toString();
    var newstr = tempstr.toString().replace(/GMT.*/g, "");
    newstr = newstr + " UTC";
    return new Date(newstr);
};

Edit: Angular 1.3.0 added UTC support to date filter, I haven't use it yet but it should be easier, here is the format:

{{ date_expression | date : format : timezone}}

Angular 1.4.3 Date API

0
0

I've created one function which converts all the timezones into local time.

I did not used getTimezoneOffset(), because it does not returns proper offset value

Requirements:

1. npm i moment-timezone

function utcToLocal(utcdateTime, tz) {
    var zone = moment.tz(tz).format("Z") // Actual zone value e:g +5:30
    var zoneValue = zone.replace(/[^0-9: ]/g, "") // Zone value without + - chars
    var operator = zone && zone.split("") && zone.split("")[0] === "-" ? "-" : "+" // operator for addition subtraction
    var localDateTime
    var hours = zoneValue.split(":")[0]
    var minutes = zoneValue.split(":")[1]
    if (operator === "-") {
        localDateTime = moment(utcdateTime).subtract(hours, "hours").subtract(minutes, "minutes").format("YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss")
    } else if (operator) {
        localDateTime = moment(utcdateTime).add(hours, "hours").add(minutes, "minutes").format("YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss")
    } else {
        localDateTime = "Invalid Timezone Operator"
    }
    return localDateTime
}

utcToLocal("2019-11-14 07:15:37", "Asia/Kolkata")

//Returns "2019-11-14 12:45:37"
0

UTC to local to ISO - Using Molp Burnbright answer

because server only accepts ISO date-time so I converted UTC to my local timezone and sent it to server in ISO format

declare this somewhere

function convertUTCDateToLocalDate(date) {
    var newDate = new Date(date.getTime() - date.getTimezoneOffset()*60*1000);
    return newDate;   
}

and do this where you need local datetime in ISO format convertUTCDateToLocalDate(date).toISOString()

0

If your want to convert UTC to any time zone, I am giving example of IST

const istOffsetMinutes = 330 ( IST offset in minutes (5 hours and 30 minutes))

const istDate = new Date(date.getTime() + istOffsetMinutes * 60 * 1000);
0
var d = new Date(Date.parse('6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM'));
d.setMinutes(d.getMinutes() - d.getTimezoneOffset());

My local time:

Wed Jun 29 2011 18:52:48 GMT+0200 (Central European Summer Time)

To check the free tool: UTC to Local Time Converter enter image description here

-1
function getUTC(str) {
    var arr = str.split(/[- :]/);
    var utc = new Date(arr[0], arr[1]-1, arr[2], arr[3], arr[4], arr[5]);
    utc.setTime(utc.getTime() - utc.getTimezoneOffset()*60*1000)
    return utc;
}

For others who visit - use this function to get a Local date object from a UTC string, should take care of DST and will work on IE, IPhone etc.

We split the string (Since JS Date parsing is not supported on some browsers) We get difference from UTC and subtract it from the UTC time, which gives us local time. Since offset returned is calculated with DST (correct me if I am wrong), so it will set that time back in the variable "utc". Finally return the date object.

-1

You can get it done using moment.js file.

Its simple you have just mention the place of the timezone.

Example: If you to convert your datetime to Asia/Kolkata timezone,you have to just mention the name of the timezone place obtained from moment.js

var UTCDateTime="Your date obtained from UTC";
var ISTleadTime=(moment.tz(UTCDateTime, "Africa/Abidjan")).tz("Asia/Kolkata").format('YYYY-MM-DD LT');

-1

For the TypeScript users, here is a helper function:

// Typescript Type: Date Options
interface DateOptions {
  day: 'numeric' | 'short' | 'long',
  month: 'numeric',
  year: 'numeric',
  timeZone: 'UTC',
};

// Helper Function: Convert UTC Date To Local Date
export const convertUTCDateToLocalDate = (date: Date) => {
  // Date Options
  const dateOptions: DateOptions = {
    day: 'numeric',
    month: 'numeric',
    year: 'numeric',
    timeZone: 'UTC',
  };

  // Formatted Date (4/20/2020)
  const formattedDate = new Date(date.getTime() - date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60 * 1000).toLocaleString('en-US', dateOptions);
  return formattedDate;
};
-3

In JavaScript I used:

var updaated_time= "2022-10-25T06:47:42.000Z"

{{updaated_time | date: 'dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm'}} //output: 26-10-2022 12:00
1
  • 4
    That's Angular mate. Dec 16, 2022 at 20:31
1
2

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.