Global meeting scheduler tools solve the recurring headache of coordinating calls between teams spread across time zones. This free browser tool displays multiple city clocks simultaneously so you can visually identify a meeting window that falls within business hours for each participant. Use it directly in your browser with no account or app installation.
The Meeting Planner is a time zone coordination tool that helps teams, remote workers, and international collaborators find suitable meeting times across multiple time zones simultaneously. You add the cities or time zones for each participant, and the tool displays a side-by-side view of the day in each location, highlighting business hours and making it immediately clear which times work for everyone. Finding a meeting window that falls within normal working hours for participants spread across New York, London, and Singapore is non-trivial without a tool like this, as the time differences can span more than 12 hours. This tool is essential for distributed teams, international clients, global conferences, and anyone scheduling across borders. It updates automatically for daylight saving time transitions and runs entirely in your browser.
Scheduling across time zones is one of the most common pain points in global business, and mistakes have real consequences: missed meetings, wasted travel, and damaged professional relationships. The complexity increases significantly as the number of time zones grows. A team with members in San Francisco (UTC-8), New York (UTC-5), London (UTC+0), Dubai (UTC+4), and Singapore (UTC+8) spans 16 hours of difference. There is no single meeting time that falls within 9am-5pm for all five locations simultaneously. The Meeting Planner makes this constraint visible and helps teams find the least-bad option or rotate meeting times fairly so different participants bear the inconvenience of off-hours calls in turn. Daylight saving time (DST) adds another layer of complexity. Not all countries observe DST, and those that do transition on different dates. For example, the US and EU shift clocks on different Sundays in March and October, creating a brief window each year where the offset between them is different from the usual amount. Missing this shift has caused missed calls and scheduling confusion for many teams. The Meeting Planner handles DST transitions automatically using current timezone data. For recurring international meetings, it is good practice to express the scheduled time in UTC alongside the local time for each participant, since UTC never changes. This tool helps establish that practice by displaying UTC alongside all local times, making it easier to anchor recurring invites to a stable reference point.