REMOTE WORK 12 min read

The Complete Remote Team Time Zone Playbook

Managing a distributed team across multiple time zones is one of the defining challenges of modern remote work. This guide covers everything from finding meeting windows to preventing "timezone fatigue" in your team.

The Core Challenge: Everyone Can't Be Convenient

When your team is spread across New York, London, and Singapore — that's a 13-hour spread. There is no single meeting time that's convenient for everyone. The goal isn't to find a perfect time; it's to be fair, transparent, and strategic about who bears the inconvenience.

⚠️ The most common mistake: Defaulting to times that are convenient for the HQ location (usually US or Europe), creating a system where distributed colleagues always take awkward meeting times. This erodes team cohesion and leads to burnout.

Finding the Overlap Window

For any pair of cities, there's usually a window of some hours where both are in normal working hours (roughly 9 AM–6 PM). Here's a quick reference:

City PairBest Overlap Window (UTC)Local Times
New York ↔ London14:00–17:00 UTCNY: 9–12 AM · London: 2–5 PM
London ↔ Beijing08:00–10:00 UTCLondon: 8–10 AM · Beijing: 4–6 PM
New York ↔ BeijingVery limitedNY 9 AM = Beijing 10 PM ❌
London ↔ Singapore08:00–10:00 UTCLondon: 8–10 AM · SG: 4–6 PM
New York ↔ TokyoVery limitedNY 9 AM = Tokyo 11 PM ❌
Dubai ↔ London08:00–14:00 UTCDubai: 12–6 PM · London: 8 AM–2 PM

The "Follow the Sun" Model

Companies with large distributed teams often use a "follow the sun" handoff model, where work is continuously passed from team to team as each region finishes its day:

  1. Asia-Pacific team works first (Singapore, Tokyo, Sydney)
  2. At end of day, they hand off to Europe/Middle East
  3. Europe/Middle East hand off to Americas
  4. Americas work finishes just as APAC is starting again

This model enables near-24/7 progress on urgent projects without requiring anyone to work unusual hours — but it requires excellent documentation and async communication skills.

Best Practices for Global Meeting Scheduling

1. Always include UTC in invites

Write meeting times as "3:00 PM EST / 8:00 PM UTC." This eliminates DST confusion entirely. Anyone anywhere can convert UTC to their local time with confidence.

✅ Good: "All-hands meeting: Wednesday at 15:00 UTC (10 AM New York / 3 PM London / 11 PM Singapore)"
❌ Bad: "All-hands meeting: Wednesday at 10 AM our time"

2. Rotate meeting times

If a recurring meeting has no ideal time for all, rotate through times every month or quarter so the inconvenience is shared. Keep a meeting rotation schedule that's visible to all team members.

3. Protect "deep work" hours

For teams spanning more than 8 time zones, resist the urge to fill every overlap window with meetings. The 2-3 hours of overlap are precious for real-time collaboration — use them wisely and protect individual focused work time.

4. Master async-first communication

Reduce synchronous meeting needs by defaulting to async communication:

5. Maintain a team time zone dashboard

Keep a pinned resource (like a World Clock page) where your team can instantly see the current time for every team member. Our World Clock lets you save multiple cities.

Dealing With DST Transitions

The most dangerous time for scheduling errors is during DST transitions. The US and Europe change clocks on different days, creating 1-2 week windows where the standard time difference is off by an hour.

⚠️ DST danger periods (when US-EU difference is off by 1 hour):
  • Second Sunday of March until last Sunday of March (US springs forward before EU)
  • Last Sunday of October until first Sunday of November (EU falls back before US)

During these windows, always verify meeting times with a real-time converter rather than relying on remembered differences.

📅 Use our Meeting Scheduler: Our Meeting Scheduler automatically handles DST and shows you working hours across all your team members' time zones in one view.

Creating a Team Time Zone Policy

High-performing distributed teams often have an explicit written policy covering:

Quick Reference: Key US Time Zones vs World

When NY is 9 AM (EST)LondonParis/BerlinDubaiIndiaBeijingTokyoSydney
9:00 AM EST2:00 PM3:00 PM6:00 PM7:30 PM10:00 PM11:00 PM+1 AM
12:00 PM EST5:00 PM6:00 PM9:00 PM10:30 PM+1 AM+2 AM+4 AM

* Based on standard time (EST). During EDT, subtract 1 hour from the result.