Best Time to Call New York from Tokyo
🕐 Live Timezone Overlap: New York & Tokyo
New York and Tokyo sit 13 hours apart, which means their standard 9am to 6pm working days do not overlap at all. When it is 9am in New York, Tokyo is already at 10pm. That gap makes synchronous meetings genuinely difficult. Both teams are at their desks at the same time for zero hours each day, so any live call requires one side to start early or finish late. Planning ahead, and being explicit about who carries the inconvenience, matters more here than with most city pairs.
Time Difference: New York and Tokyo
Tokyo is currently 13 hours ahead of New York. The live offsets are New York UTC-4 and Tokyo UTC+9. New York observes daylight saving and Tokyo does not, so the offset shifts twice a year if both sides aren't already aligned.
New York currently runs at UTC-4, having shifted from its standard UTC-5 when the USA enters daylight saving time. Tokyo stays at UTC+9 all year. Japan does not observe DST. This means the gap between New York and Tokyo is not fixed: it is 14 hours during US standard time (November to March) and 13 hours once New York moves its clocks forward in spring. The difference narrows by one hour in summer. Tokyo's clocks never move.
Best Times to Meet
There is no in-hours overlap between New York and Tokyo. Zero hours of the standard 9am to 6pm working day coincide. A practical workaround is a very early New York slot: a 7am or 8am start in New York puts the call at 8pm or 9pm in Tokyo, which is more acceptable than midnight. Tokyo teams are noted as less flexible about late evenings than they once were, particularly younger groups, so Friday late calls should be avoided. New York's 4 to 6pm client-meeting habit does not help here.
Working Hours Overlap Explained
New York operates on America/New_York (currently UTC-4). Tokyo operates on Asia/Tokyo (currently UTC+9). The table below maps a standard 9:00 AM–6:00 PM day in New York to Tokyo's local time.
| New York time | Tokyo time | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 9:00 AM | 10:00 PM | Tokyo outside hours |
| 10:00 AM | 11:00 PM | Tokyo outside hours |
| 11:00 AM | 12:00 AM | Tokyo outside hours |
| 12:00 PM | 1:00 AM | Tokyo outside hours |
| 1:00 PM | 2:00 AM | Tokyo outside hours |
| 2:00 PM | 3:00 AM | Tokyo outside hours |
| 3:00 PM | 4:00 AM | Tokyo outside hours |
| 4:00 PM | 5:00 AM | Tokyo outside hours |
| 5:00 PM | 6:00 AM | Tokyo outside hours |
| 6:00 PM | 7:00 AM | Tokyo outside hours |
Tips for Scheduling Across New York and Tokyo
- A 7am New York start places the call at 8pm Tokyo time, the least disruptive out-of-hours slot for both sides.
- Japan does not observe DST, so note the gap shifts between 13 and 14 hours depending on the US season.
- Avoid scheduling anything with Tokyo for the 29 April to 5 May Golden Week period; most offices close for four to five days.
- Friday calls past 5pm Tokyo time are rarely accepted by Japanese international-partner teams; book Thursday or earlier in the week instead.
- New York's December 24 to January 2 out-of-office stretch overlaps with Tokyo's New Year closure from 1 to 3 January, making that fortnight a near-total blackout.
Public Holidays and Working Weeks
Both cities work Monday to Friday. New York's busiest out-of-office periods include Independence Day on 4 July, Thanksgiving on the fourth Thursday of November, and the stretch from 24 December to 2 January. Tokyo's key block is Golden Week, running 29 April to 5 May, when most offices close for four to five days. Obon in mid-August and Japanese New Year from 1 to 3 January are also significant. Check both calendars before scheduling; a date that looks clear in New York may fall inside a Tokyo holiday block.