New York & Singapore Time Difference
🕐 Live Timezone Overlap: New York & Singapore
New York and Singapore sit exactly 12 hours apart, which makes real-time scheduling genuinely difficult. When it is 9am on a Monday in New York, it is already 9pm in Singapore. There is no standard working-hours overlap between the two cities. Every live call therefore falls outside business hours for one side. Teams that work across this pair routinely rotate the inconvenience, alternating who takes the early morning or late evening slot.
Time Difference: New York and Singapore
Singapore is currently 12 hours ahead of New York. The live offsets are New York UTC-4 and Singapore UTC+8. New York observes daylight saving and Singapore does not, so the offset shifts twice a year if both sides aren't already aligned.
Singapore runs at 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 New York and Singapore narrows from 13 hours in Eastern Standard Time to 12 hours during Eastern Daylight Time. The change happens twice a year on the US side only, so Singapore-based teams should note that New York's clocks move in March and November.
Best Times to Meet
With zero hours of working-hours overlap between New York and Singapore, there is no window where both cities are simultaneously within a 9am-6pm day. One team must compromise. The least disruptive slot for Singapore is typically an early evening call: 7am-8am New York time lands at 7pm-8pm in Singapore. Going the other way, a 7pm-8pm Singapore call means 7am-8am in New York. The NYSE opens at 9:30am ET, so New York teams are occupied from that point onward.
Working Hours Overlap Explained
New York operates on America/New_York (currently UTC-4). Singapore operates on Asia/Singapore (currently UTC+8). The table below maps a standard 9:00 AM–6:00 PM day in New York to Singapore's local time.
| New York time | Singapore time | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 9:00 AM | 9:00 PM | Singapore outside hours |
| 10:00 AM | 10:00 PM | Singapore outside hours |
| 11:00 AM | 11:00 PM | Singapore outside hours |
| 12:00 PM | 12:00 AM | Singapore outside hours |
| 1:00 PM | 1:00 AM | Singapore outside hours |
| 2:00 PM | 2:00 AM | Singapore outside hours |
| 3:00 PM | 3:00 AM | Singapore outside hours |
| 4:00 PM | 4:00 AM | Singapore outside hours |
| 5:00 PM | 5:00 AM | Singapore outside hours |
| 6:00 PM | 6:00 AM | Singapore outside hours |
Tips for Scheduling Across New York and Singapore
- Rotate call times fairly: one week New York takes 7am, the next Singapore takes 8pm.
- Singapore does not observe DST, so recalculate your calendar invites each time New York clocks change in March and November.
- Avoid scheduling calls during Singapore's Chinese New Year period, when absences often extend beyond the two public holidays.
- New York's 24 December to 2 January stretch is a heavy out-of-office period; confirm Singapore contacts are available before sending invites.
- Async tools work well for this pair: send recorded updates or detailed written briefs so neither city carries all the unsociable hours.
Public Holidays and Working Weeks
Both New York and Singapore follow a standard Monday-to-Friday working week, with 9am-6pm as the working day. Cross-city planning must account for both holiday calendars. Singapore observes Chinese New Year across two public holidays in January or February, with extended absences common around that period. New York's heaviest out-of-office stretches fall around Thanksgiving in late November and the 24 December to 2 January window. Book critical calls well clear of those dates on both sides.