Find Meeting Times That Work for Everyone

Global collaboration rarely fails due to language or technology, but often due to time differences. worldhours makes it visible when working hours overlap and helps find meeting times that are reasonable for everyone.

Remote and Distributed Teams

When a standup happens at 9 AM in Berlin, it's midnight in San Francisco. Fair collaboration across time zones means that the same team members don't always have to work at inconvenient times. worldhours shows the overlap of all locations at a glance—with automatic daylight saving time adjustments, even when the US and Europe switch on different dates.

International Recruiting

You've found the ideal candidate, but she's in São Paulo and you're in Munich. Instead of exchanging emails with time suggestions, add both cities to worldhours and immediately see when a conversation falls within working hours for both sides. You can share the link directly: recipients see the time automatically in their local time zone.

Sales and Customer Support

A call at the wrong time goes to voicemail, or wakes someone up at 6 AM. With worldhours you not only see your contacts' current time, but also whether it's morning or afternoon there. Especially with clients in multiple time zones, this helps maintain overview and plan calls at the right moment.

Freelancers and Consulting

International clients bring international expectations. Being transparent from the start about when you're available prevents misunderstandings. With worldhours you create a link that shows your working hours in the other person's time zone—a simple way to demonstrate professionalism and set realistic expectations. Or simply include a screenshot of the page in your next presentation. The visualization immediately shows when a meeting should be scheduled, and that international collaboration and your team are core priorities.

Research and International Cooperation

Scientific collaboration knows no borders—but time zones exist. Whether it's a project meeting between Tokyo, Zurich, and Boston or regular check-ins with partner institutions: worldhours shows which time windows are acceptable for all participants. This also helps clarify who makes compromises when.