Best Time to Call Singapore from New York
🕐 Live Timezone Overlap: Singapore & New York
Singapore and New York sit exactly 12 hours apart. That gap is not merely large; it is the maximum possible separation on a 24-hour clock, meaning one city's working day begins precisely as the other's ends. There is no overlap between Singapore's 9am–6pm window and New York's equivalent. Every meeting between the two cities requires at least one team to work outside normal hours, so agreeing in advance whose turn it is matters.
Time Difference: Singapore and New York
New York is currently 12 hours behind Singapore. The live offsets are Singapore UTC+8 and New York UTC-4. Singapore does not observe daylight saving and New York observes daylight saving, so the offset shifts twice a year if both sides aren't already aligned.
Singapore runs UTC+8 year-round and does not observe daylight saving time. New York observes DST, shifting from UTC−5 in winter to UTC−4 in summer. That means the gap between Singapore and New York changes with the US clock: 13 hours during Eastern Standard Time and 12 hours during Eastern Daylight Time. When New York clocks spring forward, the gap narrows from 13 to 12 hours. Singapore's side of the equation never changes.
Best Times to Meet
With zero hours of working-hour overlap between Singapore and New York, there is no in-hours window to schedule a call without someone conceding. The least painful split is Singapore at 8am and New York at 8pm (EDT) or 7pm (EST), sitting just outside each city's standard 9am–6pm day. Singapore's multinational APAC environment makes early starts practical. New York teams often run client meetings into the 4–6pm slot anyway, so a 7–8pm finish is a smaller ask than it sounds.
Working Hours Overlap Explained
Singapore operates on Asia/Singapore (currently UTC+8). New York operates on America/New_York (currently UTC-4). The table below maps a standard 9:00 AM–6:00 PM day in Singapore to New York's local time.
| Singapore time | New York time | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 9:00 AM | 9:00 PM | New York outside hours |
| 10:00 AM | 10:00 PM | New York outside hours |
| 11:00 AM | 11:00 PM | New York outside hours |
| 12:00 PM | 12:00 AM | New York outside hours |
| 1:00 PM | 1:00 AM | New York outside hours |
| 2:00 PM | 2:00 AM | New York outside hours |
| 3:00 PM | 3:00 AM | New York outside hours |
| 4:00 PM | 4:00 AM | New York outside hours |
| 5:00 PM | 5:00 AM | New York outside hours |
| 6:00 PM | 6:00 AM | New York outside hours |
Tips for Scheduling Across Singapore and New York
- Rotate the sacrifice: Singapore takes early calls one month, New York takes late calls the next.
- During US Eastern Standard Time, the gap widens to 13 hours; schedule any recurring series before the November clock change.
- Singapore's Chinese New Year brings extended absences beyond the two public holidays; add buffer days either side.
- New York's NYSE rhythm means mornings are dense; a 7–8pm ET slot is often cleaner than fighting pre-noon diary congestion.
- Record every cross-timezone call: with a 12-hour gap, one city will always be at the edge of its day and focus can slip.
Public Holidays and Working Weeks
Both cities follow a Monday-to-Friday working week, with 9am–6pm as the standard day. Singapore's notable public holidays include Chinese New Year in January or February, which brings two official days plus extended absences, and National Day on 9 August. New York's heaviest out-of-office periods are Independence Day on 4 July, Thanksgiving on the fourth Thursday in November, and the stretch from 24 December to 2 January. Cross-city scheduling should account for both calendars to avoid wasted invitations.