Editorial policy
GlobalTimeAtlas exists to answer practical time questions clearly: what time it is somewhere, how a time zone works, and what a sensible meeting or travel time looks like across regions. We maintain a mix of live clock pages, tools, and explanatory guides so the site is useful even when a visitor does not already know which time zone to search.
How content is created
Country, city, and UTC-offset pages combine structured time zone data with written context about scheduling, daylight saving time, related places, and common search wording. Guide pages are written as standalone explanations for real use cases such as remote work, customer support, travel, event publishing, and international calls.
We avoid publishing pages that are only a headline and a clock. When a page is likely to be useful for searchers, we add explanatory text, related links, and practical examples that help a visitor make a decision rather than simply copy an offset.
Accuracy and updates
Live times are calculated from IANA time zone identifiers and standard internationalization APIs. Since governments can change time zone and daylight saving rules, we present current pages as practical references and encourage date-specific checks for important travel, legal, broadcast, or business decisions.
We review Search Console data, user feedback, and visible page gaps to improve the site. When a page gets impressions but does not answer the visitor's likely question well enough, we expand the page with clearer explanations and better internal links.
Advertising and independence
Advertising does not determine which places, guides, or tools appear on GlobalTimeAtlas. Pages are organized around usefulness: current time, time zone clarity, scheduling needs, and regional discovery. If ads are displayed, they should not block access to the clocks, tools, or written explanations a visitor came to use.
Corrections and suggestions can be sent through the contact page. We prioritize fixes that affect current time, UTC offsets, daylight saving descriptions, broken navigation, or confusing page wording.