426

How do I convert a datetime string in local time to a string in UTC time?

I'm sure I've done this before, but can't find it and SO will hopefully help me (and others) do that in future.

Clarification: For example, if I have 2008-09-17 14:02:00 in my local timezone (+10), I'd like to generate a string with the equivalent UTC time: 2008-09-17 04:02:00.

Also, from http://lucumr.pocoo.org/2011/7/15/eppur-si-muove/, note that in general this isn't possible as with DST and other issues there is no unique conversion from local time to UTC time.

2

26 Answers 26

380

First, parse the string into a naive datetime object. This is an instance of datetime.datetime with no attached timezone information. See its documentation.

Use the pytz module, which comes with a full list of time zones + UTC. Figure out what the local timezone is, construct a timezone object from it, and manipulate and attach it to the naive datetime.

Finally, use datetime.astimezone() method to convert the datetime to UTC.

Source code, using local timezone "America/Los_Angeles", for the string "2001-2-3 10:11:12":

from datetime import datetime   
import pytz

local = pytz.timezone("America/Los_Angeles")
naive = datetime.strptime("2001-2-3 10:11:12", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
local_dt = local.localize(naive, is_dst=None)
utc_dt = local_dt.astimezone(pytz.utc)

From there, you can use the strftime() method to format the UTC datetime as needed:

utc_dt.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
12
  • 7
    Please edit your answer with the following code: [code]local.localize(naive)[/code] See the document: link Unfortunately using the tzinfo argument of the standard datetime constructors ‘’does not work’’ with pytz for many timezones. >>> datetime(2002, 10, 27, 12, 0, 0, tzinfo=amsterdam).strftime(fmt) '2002-10-27 12:00:00 AMT+0020' Apr 15, 2011 at 8:40
  • 2
    Apparently the step "figure out what the local timezone is" proves harder than it sounds (practically impossible). Sep 15, 2011 at 13:20
  • 4
    Use the local.localize as suggested by @SamStoelinga, or else you won't take into account daylight savings time. May 25, 2012 at 15:22
  • 2
  • 2
    Note that as from python 3.9 (zoneinfo) or 3.6+ (backports.zoneinfo) can replace pytz for IANA timezone
    – Orelus
    Jul 16, 2020 at 9:24
247

NOTE -- As of 2020 you should not be using .utcnow() or .utcfromtimestamp(xxx). As you've presumably moved on to python3,you should be using timezone aware datetime objects.

>>> from datetime import timezone
>>> 
>>> # alternative to '.utcnow()'
>>> dt_now = datetime.datetime.now(datetime.timezone.utc)
>>>
>>> # alternative to '.utcfromtimestamp()'
>>> dt_ts = datetime.fromtimestamp(1571595618.0, tz=timezone.utc)

For details see: https://blog.ganssle.io/articles/2019/11/utcnow.html

original answer (from 2010):

The datetime module's utcnow() function can be used to obtain the current UTC time.

>>> import datetime
>>> utc_datetime = datetime.datetime.utcnow()
>>> utc_datetime.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
'2010-02-01 06:59:19'

As the link mentioned above by Tom: http://lucumr.pocoo.org/2011/7/15/eppur-si-muove/ says:

UTC is a timezone without daylight saving time and still a timezone without configuration changes in the past.

Always measure and store time in UTC.

If you need to record where the time was taken, store that separately. Do not store the local time + timezone information!

NOTE - If any of your data is in a region that uses DST, use pytz and take a look at John Millikin's answer.

If you want to obtain the UTC time from a given string and you're lucky enough to be in a region in the world that either doesn't use DST, or you have data that is only offset from UTC without DST applied:

--> using local time as the basis for the offset value:

>>> # Obtain the UTC Offset for the current system:
>>> UTC_OFFSET_TIMEDELTA = datetime.datetime.utcnow() - datetime.datetime.now()
>>> local_datetime = datetime.datetime.strptime("2008-09-17 14:04:00", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
>>> result_utc_datetime = local_datetime + UTC_OFFSET_TIMEDELTA
>>> result_utc_datetime.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
'2008-09-17 04:04:00'

--> Or, from a known offset, using datetime.timedelta():

>>> UTC_OFFSET = 10
>>> result_utc_datetime = local_datetime - datetime.timedelta(hours=UTC_OFFSET)
>>> result_utc_datetime.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
'2008-09-17 04:04:00'

UPDATE:

Since python 3.2 datetime.timezone is available. You can generate a timezone aware datetime object with the command below:

import datetime

timezone_aware_dt = datetime.datetime.now(datetime.timezone.utc)

If your ready to take on timezone conversions go read this:

https://medium.com/@eleroy/10-things-you-need-to-know-about-date-and-time-in-python-with-datetime-pytz-dateutil-timedelta-309bfbafb3f7

10
  • 20
    That only converts the current time, I need to take any given time (as a string) and convert to UTC.
    – Tom
    Feb 2, 2010 at 4:29
  • I don't think it should matter here, if your using standard offset values. local_time = utc_time + utc_offset AND utc_time = local_time - utc_offset.
    – monkut
    Feb 10, 2011 at 3:18
  • 5
    It only works with current time because past and future timestamps may have different UTC offset due to DST.
    – Alex B
    Feb 16, 2011 at 23:55
  • 2
    There is a sporadic delta between calls to utcnow() and now(). That's a dangerous code line that could lead to strange errors later like tzinfo.utcoffset() must return a whole number of minutes and so on. May 23, 2012 at 0:23
  • 1
    1. utc offset for a local timezone can depend on datetime; therefore it might be incorrect to apply the utc offset computed for current time to other moments in future/past e.g., before/after DST transition. 2. there is no such thing as local UTC unless you're talking about computer clock synchronization that is unrelated to the question. "What time is it in UTC" has the same single answer for any place on Earth (around 7pm at the time of the comment).
    – jfs
    Nov 14, 2012 at 19:02
71

Thanks @rofly, the full conversion from string to string is as follows:

import time
time.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", 
              time.gmtime(time.mktime(time.strptime("2008-09-17 14:04:00", 
                                                    "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"))))

My summary of the time/calendar functions:

time.strptime
string --> tuple (no timezone applied, so matches string)

time.mktime
local time tuple --> seconds since epoch (always local time)

time.gmtime
seconds since epoch --> tuple in UTC

and

calendar.timegm
tuple in UTC --> seconds since epoch

time.localtime
seconds since epoch --> tuple in local timezone

3
  • 4
    (always local time) seems to be wrong: the input to mktime() is local time, the output is seconds since epoch (1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 (UTC)) that doesn't depend on timezone.
    – jfs
    Aug 10, 2012 at 20:51
  • 3
    Also there is 50% chance it fails during DST transition. See Problems with Localtime
    – jfs
    Aug 10, 2012 at 21:01
  • strptime won't return timetuple without .timetuple() method being called explicitly
    – JUBEI
    Dec 12, 2023 at 9:25
40

Here's a summary of common Python time conversions.

Some methods drop fractions of seconds, and are marked with (s). An explicit formula such as ts = (d - epoch) / unit can be used instead (thanks jfs).

  • struct_time (UTC) → POSIX (s):
    calendar.timegm(struct_time)
  • Naïve datetime (local) → POSIX (s):
    calendar.timegm(stz.localize(dt, is_dst=None).utctimetuple())
    (exception during DST transitions, see comment from jfs)
  • Naïve datetime (UTC) → POSIX (s):
    calendar.timegm(dt.utctimetuple())
  • Aware datetime → POSIX (s):
    calendar.timegm(dt.utctimetuple())
  • POSIX → struct_time (UTC, s):
    time.gmtime(t)
    (see comment from jfs)
  • Naïve datetime (local) → struct_time (UTC, s):
    stz.localize(dt, is_dst=None).utctimetuple()
    (exception during DST transitions, see comment from jfs)
  • Naïve datetime (UTC) → struct_time (UTC, s):
    dt.utctimetuple()
  • Aware datetime → struct_time (UTC, s):
    dt.utctimetuple()
  • POSIX → Naïve datetime (local):
    datetime.fromtimestamp(t, None)
    (may fail in certain conditions, see comment from jfs below)
  • struct_time (UTC) → Naïve datetime (local, s):
    datetime.datetime(struct_time[:6], tzinfo=UTC).astimezone(tz).replace(tzinfo=None)
    (can't represent leap seconds, see comment from jfs)
  • Naïve datetime (UTC) → Naïve datetime (local):
    dt.replace(tzinfo=UTC).astimezone(tz).replace(tzinfo=None)
  • Aware datetime → Naïve datetime (local):
    dt.astimezone(tz).replace(tzinfo=None)
  • POSIX → Naïve datetime (UTC):
    datetime.utcfromtimestamp(t)
  • struct_time (UTC) → Naïve datetime (UTC, s):
    datetime.datetime(*struct_time[:6])
    (can't represent leap seconds, see comment from jfs)
  • Naïve datetime (local) → Naïve datetime (UTC):
    stz.localize(dt, is_dst=None).astimezone(UTC).replace(tzinfo=None)
    (exception during DST transitions, see comment from jfs)
  • Aware datetime → Naïve datetime (UTC):
    dt.astimezone(UTC).replace(tzinfo=None)
  • POSIX → Aware datetime:
    datetime.fromtimestamp(t, tz)
    (may fail for non-pytz timezones)
  • struct_time (UTC) → Aware datetime (s):
    datetime.datetime(struct_time[:6], tzinfo=UTC).astimezone(tz)
    (can't represent leap seconds, see comment from jfs)
  • Naïve datetime (local) → Aware datetime:
    stz.localize(dt, is_dst=None)
    (exception during DST transitions, see comment from jfs)
  • Naïve datetime (UTC) → Aware datetime:
    dt.replace(tzinfo=UTC)

Source: taaviburns.ca

6
  • 1
    (1) fromtimestamp(t, None) may fail if the local timezone had different utc offset at t and C library has no access to the tz database on the given platform. You could use tzlocal.get_localzone() to provide tzdata in a portable way. (2) fromtimestamp(t, tz) may fail for non-pytz timezones. (3) datetime(*struct_time[:6]) you are missing *. (4) timegm(), utctimetuple(), struct_time -based solutions drop fractions of a second. You could use an explicit formula such as: ts = (d - epoch) / unit instead.
    – jfs
    Sep 9, 2015 at 15:36
  • 1
    (5) stz.localize(dt, is_dst=None) raises an exception for ambiguous or non-existent local times e.g., during DST transitions. To avoid the exception, use stz.normalize(stz.localize(dt)) that may return imprecise results. (6) datetime() can't represent a leap second. Convert struct_time to "seconds since epoch" as a workaround first. (7) time.gmtime(t) unlike calendar.timegm() may expect non-POSIX input if "right" timezone is used. Use the explicit formula if the input is POSIX instead: gmtime = lambda t: datetime(1970,1,1, tzinfo=utc) + timedelta(seconds=t)
    – jfs
    Sep 9, 2015 at 15:37
  • i wish this was in a table, easier to read (it is in the link) Mar 16, 2018 at 11:33
  • 1
    @MichaelChirico, this answer states that "We do not (and will not) allow <table> tags. Sorry. This is intentional and by design. If you need a quick and dirty "table", use <pre> and ASCII layout." I don't believe an ASCII table would be more readable than the list above.
    – akaihola
    May 21, 2018 at 18:44
  • well that's unfortunate. you have my upvote anyway... maybe reference the table in the link within your answer? May 21, 2018 at 23:02
39

An option available since Python 3.6: datetime.astimezone(tz=None) can be used to get an aware datetime object representing local time (docs). This can then easily be converted to UTC.

from datetime import datetime, timezone
s = "2008-09-17 14:02:00"

# to datetime object:
dt = datetime.fromisoformat(s) # Python 3.7

# I'm on time zone Europe/Berlin; CEST/UTC+2 during summer 2008
dt = dt.astimezone()
print(dt)
# 2008-09-17 14:02:00+02:00

# ...and to UTC:
dtutc = dt.astimezone(timezone.utc)
print(dtutc)
# 2008-09-17 12:02:00+00:00
  • Note: while the described conversion to UTC works perfectly fine, .astimezone() sets tzinfo of the datetime object to a timedelta-derived timezone - so don't expect any "DST-awareness" from it. Be careful with timedelta arithmetic here. Unless you convert to UTC first of course.
  • related: Get local time zone name on Windows (Python 3.9 zoneinfo)
1
  • 3
    Since all the other answers are pretty old and this is solution without any external packages (datetime is builtin) this answer deserves more credit. Nov 21, 2022 at 13:04
26

I'm having good luck with dateutil (which is widely recommended on SO for other related questions):

from datetime import *
from dateutil import *
from dateutil.tz import *

# METHOD 1: Hardcode zones:
utc_zone = tz.gettz('UTC')
local_zone = tz.gettz('America/Chicago')
# METHOD 2: Auto-detect zones:
utc_zone = tz.tzutc()
local_zone = tz.tzlocal()

# Convert time string to datetime
local_time = datetime.strptime("2008-09-17 14:02:00", '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')

# Tell the datetime object that it's in local time zone since 
# datetime objects are 'naive' by default
local_time = local_time.replace(tzinfo=local_zone)
# Convert time to UTC
utc_time = local_time.astimezone(utc_zone)
# Generate UTC time string
utc_string = utc_time.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')

(Code was derived from this answer to Convert UTC datetime string to local datetime)

4
  • dateutil can fail for past dates if local timezone had different utc offset then (unrelated to DST transitions) on systems where the implementation doesn't use a historical timezone database (notably Windows). pytz + tzlocal could be used instead.
    – jfs
    Dec 5, 2013 at 8:29
  • @JFSebastian- Hadn't heard of that- where can we get more info?
    – Yarin
    Dec 26, 2013 at 21:30
  • take Windows machine, set any timezone that had different utc offset in the past e.g., Europe/Moscow. Compare results with pytz. Plus, you could test this bug that fails even on Ubuntu though I'm not sure about the correct API usage in this case.
    – jfs
    Dec 27, 2013 at 8:46
  • What's the output? Please post the output.
    – not2qubit
    Jan 18, 2018 at 16:15
24
def local_to_utc(t):
    secs = time.mktime(t)
    return time.gmtime(secs)

def utc_to_local(t):
    secs = calendar.timegm(t)
    return time.localtime(secs)

Source: http://feihonghsu.blogspot.com/2008/02/converting-from-local-time-to-utc.html

Example usage from bd808: If your source is a datetime.datetime object t, call as:

local_to_utc(t.timetuple())
3
  • 5
    If your source is a datetime.datetime object t, call as: local_to_utc(t.timetuple())
    – bd808
    Dec 18, 2008 at 4:50
  • 2
    .timetuple() call sets tm_isdst to -1; there is 50% chance mktime() fails during DST transition.
    – jfs
    Dec 5, 2013 at 8:24
  • 1
    The solution by Chuck loses millisecond information.
    – Luca
    Jan 21, 2015 at 22:23
20

One more example with pytz, but includes localize(), which saved my day.

import pytz, datetime
utc = pytz.utc
fmt = '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'
amsterdam = pytz.timezone('Europe/Amsterdam')

dt = datetime.datetime.strptime("2012-04-06 10:00:00", fmt)
am_dt = amsterdam.localize(dt)
print am_dt.astimezone(utc).strftime(fmt)
'2012-04-06 08:00:00'
0
12

I've had the most success with python-dateutil:

from dateutil import tz

def datetime_to_utc(date):
    """Returns date in UTC w/o tzinfo"""
    return date.astimezone(tz.gettz('UTC')).replace(tzinfo=None) if date.tzinfo else date
1
8
import time

import datetime

def Local2UTC(LocalTime):

    EpochSecond = time.mktime(LocalTime.timetuple())
    utcTime = datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(EpochSecond)

    return utcTime

>>> LocalTime = datetime.datetime.now()

>>> UTCTime = Local2UTC(LocalTime)

>>> LocalTime.ctime()

'Thu Feb  3 22:33:46 2011'

>>> UTCTime.ctime()

'Fri Feb  4 05:33:46 2011'
1
7

Here's an example with the native zoneinfo module in Python3.9:

from datetime import datetime
from zoneinfo import ZoneInfo

# Get timezone we're trying to convert from
local_tz = ZoneInfo("America/New_York")
# UTC timezone
utc_tz = ZoneInfo("UTC")

dt = datetime.strptime("2021-09-20 17:20:00","%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
dt = dt.replace(tzinfo=local_tz)
dt_utc = dt.astimezone(utc_tz)

print(dt.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"))
print(dt_utc.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"))

This may be preferred over just using dt.astimezone() in situations where the timezone you're converting from isn't reflective of your system's local timezone. Not having to rely on external libraries is nice too.

Note: This may not work on Windows systems, since zoneinfo relies on an IANA database that may not be present. The tzdata package can be installed as a workaround. It's a first-party package, but is not in the standard library.

2
  • 1
    Good modern answer, I hope this can rise to the top one day.
    – wim
    Sep 24, 2021 at 3:40
  • To be clear: In my case this applied a DST conversion method, when given a date in summer. I set the timezone to "Europe/Amsterdam", and 04:00 Amsterdam became 02:00 in the output, so it adjusted for DST in summer.
    – wearego
    Apr 5, 2023 at 19:19
6

if you prefer datetime.datetime:

dt = datetime.strptime("2008-09-17 14:04:00","%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
utc_struct_time = time.gmtime(time.mktime(dt.timetuple()))
utc_dt = datetime.fromtimestamp(time.mktime(utc_struct_time))
print dt.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
3
  • 1
    Sure, but I can't see why you'd prefer that. It requires an extra import and 3 more function calls than my version...
    – Tom
    Mar 4, 2010 at 2:36
  • %Z and %z prints white spaces still. May 22, 2012 at 15:09
  • 2
    it is incorrect. It fails if the local timezone is not UTC. mktime() expects local time as the input. fromtimestamp() returns local time, not utc. If you fix it then see these additional issues (like dateutil, stdlib-only solution may fail)
    – jfs
    Jan 20, 2015 at 10:07
6

Simple

I did it like this:

>>> utc_delta = datetime.utcnow()-datetime.now()
>>> utc_time = datetime(2008, 9, 17, 14, 2, 0) + utc_delta
>>> print(utc_time)
2008-09-17 19:01:59.999996

Fancy Implementation

If you want to get fancy, you can turn this into a functor:

class to_utc():
    utc_delta = datetime.utcnow() - datetime.now()

    def __call__(cls, t):
        return t + cls.utc_delta

Result:

>>> utc_converter = to_utc()
>>> print(utc_converter(datetime(2008, 9, 17, 14, 2, 0)))
2008-09-17 19:01:59.999996
2
  • 6
    this doesn't work for daylight savings time - e.g. if it's currently summer and the date you're converting is in winter. and the question was about converting dates stored as strings...
    – Tom
    May 3, 2018 at 23:27
  • 2
    FYI. The biggest problem with this method (besides daylight savings) is the few milliseconds the delta will be off by. All my calendar invites are showing up as off by 1 minute.
    – Nostalg.io
    Oct 15, 2018 at 20:36
4

How about -

time.strftime("%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ", time.gmtime(seconds))

if seconds is None then it converts the local time to UTC time else converts the passed in time to UTC.

4

You can do it with:

>>> from time import strftime, gmtime, localtime
>>> strftime('%H:%M:%S', gmtime()) #UTC time
>>> strftime('%H:%M:%S', localtime()) # localtime
3

In python 3.9.0, after you've parsed your local time local_time into datetime.datetime object, just use local_time.astimezone(datetime.timezone.utc).

1
  • 2
    this answer would be better if you showed how to parse the local time into a datetime object
    – Connor
    Dec 9, 2020 at 18:51
2

For getting around day-light saving, etc.

None of the above answers particularly helped me. The code below works for GMT.

def get_utc_from_local(date_time, local_tz=None):
    assert date_time.__class__.__name__ == 'datetime'
    if local_tz is None:
        local_tz = pytz.timezone(settings.TIME_ZONE) # Django eg, "Europe/London"
    local_time = local_tz.normalize(local_tz.localize(date_time))
    return local_time.astimezone(pytz.utc)

import pytz
from datetime import datetime

summer_11_am = datetime(2011, 7, 1, 11)
get_utc_from_local(summer_11_am)
>>>datetime.datetime(2011, 7, 1, 10, 0, tzinfo=<UTC>)

winter_11_am = datetime(2011, 11, 11, 11)
get_utc_from_local(winter_11_am)
>>>datetime.datetime(2011, 11, 11, 11, 0, tzinfo=<UTC>)
2

Using http://crsmithdev.com/arrow/

arrowObj = arrow.Arrow.strptime('2017-02-20 10:00:00', '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S' , 'US/Eastern')

arrowObj.to('UTC') or arrowObj.to('local') 

This library makes life easy :)

1
  • arrow is awesome: arrow.get(datetime.now(), 'local').to('utc').naive
    – SteveJ
    Jun 22, 2017 at 18:28
2

I have this code in one of my projects:

from datetime import datetime
## datetime.timezone works in newer versions of python
try:
    from datetime import timezone
    utc_tz = timezone.utc
except:
    import pytz
    utc_tz = pytz.utc

def _to_utc_date_string(ts):
    # type (Union[date,datetime]]) -> str
    """coerce datetimes to UTC (assume localtime if nothing is given)"""
    if (isinstance(ts, datetime)):
        try:
            ## in python 3.6 and higher, ts.astimezone() will assume a
            ## naive timestamp is localtime (and so do we)
            ts = ts.astimezone(utc_tz)
        except:
            ## in python 2.7 and 3.5, ts.astimezone() will fail on
            ## naive timestamps, but we'd like to assume they are
            ## localtime
            import tzlocal
            ts = tzlocal.get_localzone().localize(ts).astimezone(utc_tz)
    return ts.strftime("%Y%m%dT%H%M%SZ")
1

I found the best answer on another question here. It only uses python built-in libraries and does not require you to input your local timezone (a requirement in my case)

import time
import calendar

local_time = time.strptime("2018-12-13T09:32:00.000", "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f")
local_seconds = time.mktime(local_time)
utc_time = time.gmtime(local_seconds)

I'm reposting the answer here since this question pops up in google instead of the linked question depending on the search keywords.

1

For anyone who is confused with the most upvoted answer. You can convert a datetime string to utc time in python by generating a datetime object and then you can use astimezone(pytz.utc) to get datetime in utc.

For eg.

let say we have local datetime string as 2021-09-02T19:02:00Z in isoformat

Now to convert this string to utc datetime. we first need to generate datetime object using this string by

dt = datetime.strptime(dt,'%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ')

this will give you python datetime object, then you can use astimezone(pytz.utc) to get utc datetime like

dt = datetime.strptime(dt,'%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ') dt = dt.astimezone(pytz.utc)

this will give you datetime object in utc, then you can convert it to string using dt.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")

full code eg:

from datetime import datetime
import pytz

def converLocalToUTC(datetime, getString=True, format="%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"):
    dt = datetime.strptime(dt,'%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ')
    dt = dt.astimezone(pytz.utc)
    
    if getString:
        return dt.strftime(format)
    return dt

then you can call it as

converLocalToUTC("2021-09-02T19:02:00Z")

took help from https://stackoverflow.com/a/79877/7756843

1

The default datetime object will have no timezone set up (tzinfo property will be None), so after parsing the string into the datetime object, the timezone should be convert to UTC:

from datetime import datetime, timezone

def convert_local_time_to_utc(dt: str, format="%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f"):
    dt = datetime.strptime(dt, format).astimezone(tz=timezone.utc)
    return dt

local_datetime_string = "2021-01-01 01:23:45.678910"
utc_datetime = convert_local_time_to_utc(dt=local_datetime_string)
print(utc_datetime.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S.%f"))
# 2020-12-31 19:23:45.678910
0

If you already have a datetime object my_dt you can change it to UTC with:

datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(my_dt.timestamp())
0

Briefly, to convert any datetime date to UTC time:

from datetime import datetime

def to_utc(date):
    return datetime(*date.utctimetuple()[:6])

Let's explain with an example. First, we need to create a datetime from the string:

>>> date = datetime.strptime("11 Feb 2011 17:33:54 -0800", "%d %b %Y %H:%M:%S %z")

Then, we can call the function:

>>> to_utc(date)
datetime.datetime(2011, 2, 12, 1, 33, 54)

Step by step how the function works:

>>> date.utctimetuple()
time.struct_time(tm_year=2011, tm_mon=2, tm_mday=12, tm_hour=1, tm_min=33, tm_sec=54, tm_wday=5, tm_yday=43, tm_isdst=0)
>>> date.utctimetuple()[:6]
(2011, 2, 12, 1, 33, 54)
>>> datetime(*date.utctimetuple()[:6])
datetime.datetime(2011, 2, 12, 1, 33, 54)
-1

In python3:

pip install python-dateutil

from dateutil.parser import tz

mydt.astimezone(tz.gettz('UTC')).replace(tzinfo=None) 
2
  • this doesn't seem to work, it raises a ValueError exception: ValueError: astimezone() cannot be applied to a naive datetime
    – Stormsson
    May 12, 2018 at 8:20
  • 1
    It should be: from dateutil import tz
    – Javier
    Jul 4, 2018 at 9:34
-2

How about -

time.strftime("%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ", time.gmtime(seconds))

if seconds is None then it converts the local time to UTC time else converts the passed in time to UTC.

1
  • 1
    This doesn't help, the question was to convert a given local time string to a utc string.
    – Tom
    Jul 17, 2011 at 2:47

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