Compare Tokyo and London local times for meetings, daylight saving changes, and practical work-hour fit. Pick a date and candidate time, compare both local times, then copy the result into a calendar invite.
For Tokyo and London, look for a slot where both cities are marked as work hours, early, or evening. If one side is marked bad, use the global planner or split the meeting into a regional handoff.
A Japan-Europe team can compare Tokyo evening with London morning or midday, especially around UK daylight saving changes.
Use it when the task is specifically Tokyo and London meeting time, rather than a broad world meeting planner.
Yes, the browser time-zone database is used for the selected date, so DST-sensitive regions are handled based on that date.
Start with the real meeting date, then compare a few candidate times instead of trusting one default slot. For Tokyo and London, the same clock time can feel very different depending on daylight saving, local work habits, and whether the meeting is one-time or recurring.
Use this for handoffs between Japan-based teams and UK or Europe stakeholders. The goal is not only to find a technically possible overlap, but to avoid repeatedly assigning the worst hour to the same region.
| Question | What to check |
|---|---|
| Main intent | Japan and UK calls |
| Fairness | Rotate early or late slots when one region cannot fit normal work hours. |
| Calendar invite | Include every important local time, not just the organizer time. |
Tokyo evening is often London morning or midday depending on daylight saving time. Always confirm the final event in a calendar app, especially for customer calls, interviews, webinars, launches, or meetings scheduled near daylight saving transitions.
Tokyo and London have a workable but narrow overlap for live calls. Tokyo evening often pairs with London morning or midday, which can work for handoffs but may be too late for long workshops.
For recurring meetings, avoid placing every call at the edge of Tokyo evening. Rotate asynchronous updates or use shorter agendas when the time is outside one side’s preferred workday.