Is there a reliable way to get a timezone from client browser? I saw the following links but I want a more robust solution.
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onlineaspect.com/2007/06/08/…– Lenar HoytAug 4, 2011 at 10:21
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8I wrote jsTimezoneDetect that you link to above, and my take on the situation is that it is as close as you can get with pure cross browser javascript (without geolocation and IP lookups).– Jon NylanderAug 11, 2011 at 9:16
8 Answers
Half a decade later we have a built-in way for it! For modern browsers I would use:
const tz = Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone;
console.log(tz);
This returns a IANA timezone string, but not the offset. Learn more at the MDN reference.
Compatibility table - as of March 2019, works for 90% of the browsers in use globally. Doesn't work on Internet Explorer.
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3Firefox and IE seems to not support the property :( developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…– WallaceSep 7, 2016 at 17:58
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9
Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone
will return the expected value starting from Firefox 52: kangax.github.io/compat-table/esintl/…– julenMar 3, 2017 at 12:45 -
How does one use this is a form? In a hidden value as suggested upon developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/input/… ?– hendryMar 25, 2019 at 7:24
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9
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2I believe not providing the offset is the best policy for long-range planning. If the client is expected to provide the offset, they are also expected to be up-to-date with the IANA timezone database not only for the set of the timezone strings available at that time, but also the offsets for those timezone strings at that point in time. Best to depend on server-side code to resolve timezone string to offset correctly based on tzdata for the point in time when the request occurs, rather than depending on browsers' up-to-dateness. Apr 2, 2020 at 16:50
Often when people are looking for "timezones", what will suffice is just "UTC offset". e.g., their server is in UTC+5 and they want to know that their client is running in UTC-8.
In plain old javascript (new Date()).getTimezoneOffset()/60
will return the current number of hours offset from UTC.
It's worth noting a possible "gotcha" in the sign of the getTimezoneOffset()
return value (from MDN docs):
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, for time zone UTC+10:00 (Australian Eastern Standard Time, Vladivostok Time, Chamorro Standard Time), -600 will be returned.
However, I recommend you use the day.js for time/date related Javascript code. In which case you can get an ISO 8601 formatted UTC offset by running:
> dayjs().format("Z")
"-08:00"
It probably bears mentioning that the client can easily falsify this information.
(Note: this answer originally recommended https://momentjs.com/, but dayjs is a more modern, smaller alternative.)
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42It may be worth noting that offset and time zone are not necessarily the same thing.– DexAug 2, 2015 at 4:45
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9How would you apply DST with only the offset? In those area the offset is wrong half the year. IMO the timezone is more accurate. Aug 20, 2015 at 9:54
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7DST is part of the offset at any given time. Central European Time in winter is UTC+01:00. However, when DST is applied CET is UTC+02:00, like it is now in Denmark where I am. Sep 7, 2015 at 13:31
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2
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2I would change the first sentence to say: "Often, when people think offset is enough, what they actually need is a timezone. The former completely ignores daylight saving, while the latter does not."– FlimmDec 3, 2019 at 16:28
Look at this repository pageloom it is helpful
download jstz.min.js and add a function to your html page
<script language="javascript">
function getTimezoneName() {
timezone = jstz.determine()
return timezone.name();
}
</script>
and call this function from your display tag
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27TL;DR We now can use
Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone
(no IE11) as suggested by Wallace.– Code4R7Jul 12, 2018 at 17:48
For now, the best bet is probably jstz as suggested in mbayloon's answer.
For completeness, it should be mentioned that there is a standard on it's way: Intl. You can see this in Chrome already:
> Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone
"America/Los_Angeles"
(This doesn't actually follow the standard, which is one more reason to stick with the library)
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1Intl looks stable in everything but Safari. caniuse.com/#feat=internationalization Mar 23, 2015 at 9:17
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2@MichaelCole Conformant implementations of
Intl
are supposed to returnundefined
for thetimeZone
property if you didn't manually specify a timezone in constructing theDateTimeFormat
. Chrome deviates from the standard by returning the system's timezone instead; that's what Johannes's answer exploits, but also why he said "doesn't actually follow the standard". Nov 20, 2015 at 2:09 -
23FYI - the standard is now Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone– NederbyJan 10, 2017 at 15:01
you could use moment-timezone to guess the timezone:
> moment.tz.guess()
"America/Asuncion"
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2While that library is incredibly useful still in 2020, moment has been deprecated and shouldn't be used with new projects. Dec 16, 2020 at 23:23
Here is a jsfiddle
It provides the abbreviation of the current user timezone.
Here is the code sample
var tz = jstz.determine();
console.log(tz.name());
console.log(moment.tz.zone(tz.name()).abbr(new Date().getTime()));
I used an approach similar to the one taken by Josh Fraser, which determines the browser time offset from UTC and whether it recognizes DST or not (but somewhat simplified from his code):
var ClientTZ = {
UTCoffset: 0, // Browser time offset from UTC in minutes
UTCoffsetT: '+0000S', // Browser time offset from UTC in '±hhmmD' form
hasDST: false, // Browser time observes DST
// Determine browser's timezone and DST
getBrowserTZ: function () {
var self = ClientTZ;
// Determine UTC time offset
var now = new Date();
var date1 = new Date(now.getFullYear(), 1-1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0); // Jan
var diff1 = -date1.getTimezoneOffset();
self.UTCoffset = diff1;
// Determine DST use
var date2 = new Date(now.getFullYear(), 6-1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0); // Jun
var diff2 = -date2.getTimezoneOffset();
if (diff1 != diff2) {
self.hasDST = true;
if (diff1 - diff2 >= 0)
self.UTCoffset = diff2; // East of GMT
}
// Convert UTC offset to ±hhmmD form
diff2 = (diff1 < 0 ? -diff1 : diff1) / 60;
var hr = Math.floor(diff2);
var min = diff2 - hr;
diff2 = hr * 100 + min * 60;
self.UTCoffsetT = (diff1 < 0 ? '-' : '+') + (hr < 10 ? '0' : '') + diff2.toString() + (self.hasDST ? 'D' : 'S');
return self.UTCoffset;
}
};
// Onload
ClientTZ.getBrowserTZ();
Upon loading, the ClientTZ.getBrowserTZ()
function is executed, which sets:
ClientTZ.UTCoffset
to the browser time offset from UTC in minutes (e.g., CST is −360 minutes, which is −6.0 hours from UTC);ClientTZ.UTCoffsetT
to the offset in the form'±hhmmD'
(e.g.,'-0600D'
), where the suffix isD
for DST andS
for standard (non-DST);ClientTZ.hasDST
(to true or false).
The ClientTZ.UTCoffset
is provided in minutes instead of hours, because some timezones have fractional hourly offsets (e.g., +0415).
The intent behind ClientTZ.UTCoffsetT
is to use it as a key into a table of timezones (not provided here), such as for a drop-down <select>
list.
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Looks like it will always return 'D' if daylight savings is observed. And why only five months difference? Surely, Jan and July will work more reliably?– MattApr 2, 2019 at 21:18
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@Matt - Yes, you could use
7-1
for July instead of June. I'm not sure if it really makes any difference, since I doubt there are regional DST schemes that do not include June. Apr 2, 2019 at 23:21
No. There is no single reliable way and there will never be. Did you really think you could trust the client?
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25To clarify: The client's clock may not be set correctly, or they may be maliciously trying to fool you into thinking they're in a different time zone from actual. If you're going to use the client's time zone, don't do it for anything important. Nov 12, 2012 at 13:54
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10
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8Yes, for my application I can trust the client. If the client has been mis-configured or has a bug, that's on my users. Mar 23, 2015 at 9:15
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3I actually agree with Florian. Reliable method? Kind of. Reliable data? Definately not.– RobNov 1, 2016 at 11:30
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5The question does not says how the data will be used. For example it doesn't says that the detected timezone will ever be submitted to a server. So the remark about trust is irrelevant if the data is used purely locally.– dolmenApr 30, 2019 at 12:38