9am in Seoul is 3am in Tel Aviv
MEETING PLANNER
hover a column · click to lockSeoul is 6 hours ahead of Tel Aviv. Seoul runs on Asia/Seoul (UTC+9); Tel Aviv runs on Asia/Jerusalem (UTC+3). The difference is measured right now; it can shift by one hour during daylight-saving-time transitions.
Tel Aviv observes daylight saving time — shifting between IST (UTC+2) and IDT (UTC+3) — while Seoul stays on KST (UTC+9) year-round. The difference is 7 hours in Tel Aviv’s winter and 6 hours in Tel Aviv’s summer. Transitions happen in late March and late October for most Northern-Hemisphere DST zones, and late September/early April for Southern-Hemisphere ones — check the current date against the city’s DST schedule before anchoring a meeting at the edge of those windows.
Standard 9-to-5 business hours in Seoul and Tel Aviv overlap for roughly 2 hours a day. That window lands at 15:00–17:00 in Seoul and 09:00–11:00 in Tel Aviv. Teams with real-time coordination needs anchor cross-city calls inside it: long enough to cover handovers, short enough that it forces crisp agendas. Outside that window, async is the default — shared docs, recorded updates, and scheduled follow-ups rather than live meetings.
When planning recurring meetings across Seoul and Tel Aviv, pin them to one city’s local time rather than UTC or the other city’s clock. That way, the meeting time stays stable for the person anchoring the schedule, and the other side absorbs the one-hour drift during DST transitions. The alternative — a meeting pinned to the non-DST city — means the DST city sees the meeting time “move” twice a year, which is how recurring calendar invites end up at 7am on someone’s calendar in October.
- What is the time difference between Seoul and Tel Aviv?
- Seoul is currently 6 hours ahead of Tel Aviv. Seoul is on Asia/Seoul (UTC+9); Tel Aviv is on Asia/Jerusalem (UTC+3). The offset shifts by one hour during daylight-saving transitions — the difference is 7 hours in winter and 6 hours in summer.
- Do Seoul and Tel Aviv observe daylight saving time?
- Tel Aviv observes daylight saving time (IST in winter, IDT in summer). Seoul stays on KST year-round. The gap between them shifts by one hour seasonally.
- When do business hours overlap between Seoul and Tel Aviv?
- Standard 9-to-5 business hours overlap for about 2 hours per day — roughly 15:00–17:00 in Seoul and 09:00–11:00 in Tel Aviv. Cross-city calls typically land inside that window.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the time difference between Seoul and Tel Aviv?
Seoul is currently 6 hours ahead of Tel Aviv. Seoul is on Asia/Seoul (UTC+9); Tel Aviv is on Asia/Jerusalem (UTC+3). The offset shifts by one hour during daylight-saving transitions — the difference is 7 hours in winter and 6 hours in summer.
Do Seoul and Tel Aviv observe daylight saving time?
Tel Aviv observes daylight saving time (IST in winter, IDT in summer). Seoul stays on KST year-round. The gap between them shifts by one hour seasonally.
When do business hours overlap between Seoul and Tel Aviv?
Standard 9-to-5 business hours overlap for about 2 hours per day — roughly 15:00–17:00 in Seoul and 09:00–11:00 in Tel Aviv. Cross-city calls typically land inside that window.