Time Difference: Paris vs London

Paris (GMT+2) · London (GMT+1)

Paris

GMT+2

--:--:--

London

GMT+1

--:--:--

London and Paris are in the same UTC offset

Time Difference

0h

Paris Offset

GMT+2

Europe/Paris

London Offset

GMT+1

Europe/London

Summary

Paris and London share the same UTC offset

Business Hours Overlap (9 AM – 6 PM)

9 hours overlap during standard business hours in both cities.

ParisLondonOverlap
9 AM9 AMBusiness hours
10 AM10 AMBusiness hours
11 AM11 AMBusiness hours
12 PM12 PMBusiness hours
1 PM1 PMBusiness hours
2 PM2 PMBusiness hours
3 PM3 PMBusiness hours
4 PM4 PMBusiness hours
5 PM5 PMBusiness hours
6 PM6 PMOutside

Did You Know? — Paris & London

Time Zone Facts: Paris

  • France uses Central European Time (CET, UTC+1) in winter and Central European Summer Time (CEST, UTC+2) in summer, and despite being geographically close to the UK, Paris is always 1 hour ahead of London.
  • Paris is a key overlap city for transatlantic business: in the morning it aligns with East Coast US pre-market activity, and in the afternoon it captures the New York open at 3:30 PM CET.
  • At 48.9°N, Paris experiences around 8.5 hours of daylight in December and 16 hours in June — a swing of over 7.5 hours between solstices.

Time Zone Facts: London

  • London sits on the Prime Meridian at 0° longitude, which is why Greenwich Mean Time (GMT/UTC+0) became the world's reference timezone in 1884 at the International Meridian Conference.
  • The London Stock Exchange opens at 8:00 AM GMT and closes at 4:30 PM GMT, making London's morning the global overlap window where both European and (briefly) US pre-market traders are active.
  • At 51.5°N — further north than most of Canada — London receives only about 7.5 hours of daylight at winter solstice but enjoys over 16.5 hours of daylight in midsummer.

Frequently Asked Questions

Paris and London are in the same time zone offset, so there is no time difference between them.
There are 9 overlapping business hours (9 AM–6 PM) between Paris and London. Scheduling during those hours ensures both parties are in their working day.
Paris and London share the same UTC offset (GMT+2), so their workdays are completely synchronized — no conversion needed, identical real-time availability, and deadline alignment is automatic.
Paris observes GMT+2 (Europe/Paris). A standard 9:00 AM–6:00 PM workday in Paris maps to specific UTC hours — use UTC-anchored deadlines when coordinating with Paris-based teammates to avoid confusion from local clock changes.
London observes GMT+1 (Europe/London). A standard 9:00 AM–6:00 PM workday in London maps to specific UTC hours — use UTC-anchored deadlines when coordinating with London-based teammates to avoid confusion from local clock changes.
If {cityA} and {cityB} follow different DST schedules — common in North America–Europe, Southern Hemisphere, or no-DST pairings — the time difference shifts by 1 hour during each transition. The 1–3 weeks between the two cities' clock-change dates create a 'gap window' that frequently catches teams off guard. The difference displayed here is always live and accounts for current DST status.
The best time to call London from Paris is during the 9-hour business-hours overlap window, when both cities are within their standard working day (9 AM–6 PM).
When it is midnight (00:00) in Paris, it is 12 AM in London.
No — Paris and London share the same UTC offset, so they are always on the same calendar date.
Paris observes Europe/Paris (GMT+2). For async-first teams, the most reliable approach is anchoring shared deadlines in UTC rather than any local time, and defining each member's 'availability window' — typically 9:00 AM–6:00 PM Europe/Paris for Paris. This eliminates confusion when DST transitions shift local clocks seasonally.
London observes Europe/London (GMT+1). For async-first teams, the most reliable approach is anchoring shared deadlines in UTC rather than any local time, and defining each member's 'availability window' — typically 9:00 AM–6:00 PM Europe/London for London. This eliminates confusion when DST transitions shift local clocks seasonally.
Yes — with 9 hours of overlapping business hours, Paris and London teams can hold real-time standups and synchronous collaboration daily during that window.

From the Blog

Data verified by Arjun Mehta, Geospatial Engineer · Sources: IANA Time Zone Database · Methodology
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