Dubai is UTC+4 (GMT+4, no DST). Copenhagen is UTC+1 (GMT+1) / UTC+2 (GMT+2). Copenhagen is currently 2 hours behind Dubai.
Best times to meet (Dubai local time): 11:00 AM — 9:00 AM in Copenhagen; 12:00 PM — 10:00 AM in Copenhagen; 1:00 PM — 11:00 AM in Copenhagen; 2:00 PM — 12:00 PM in Copenhagen; 3:00 PM — 1:00 PM in Copenhagen; 4:00 PM — 2:00 PM in Copenhagen.
Times shown in Dubai local time → Copenhagen local time. Based on business hours 09:00–17:00.
Dubai observes Gulf Standard Time (GST, UTC+4) year-round. The UAE has never observed Daylight Saving Time, making Dubai one of the most consistent timezone anchors in the world for scheduling purposes. GST is shared by the UAE and Oman. The fixed UTC+4 position places Dubai midway between Europe and Asia — it is 4 hours ahead of London (GMT), 9 hours ahead of New York (EST), and 4 hours behind Singapore (SGT) — a location that historically made the Persian Gulf a trading crossroads between East and West.
Dubai has transformed into a global business hub in the 21st century, hosting regional headquarters for hundreds of multinational corporations, a major international airline (Emirates), and one of the world's busiest airports by international passenger traffic. The Dubai Financial Market (DFM) and Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange (ADX) operate Sunday to Thursday — the UAE workweek runs Sunday through Thursday, with Friday and Saturday as the weekend (though some private companies use Monday–Friday). This creates a narrow window of weekday overlap with European and American counterparts: Sunday in Dubai is a workday while Europe is on weekend, and Thursday in Dubai ends before much of the Americas starts its week.
The lack of DST means Dubai's offset to summer-time Europe briefly narrows: when London is on BST (UTC+1) in summer, London–Dubai difference is only 3 hours instead of 4. When New York is on EDT (UTC−4) in summer, the New York–Dubai gap narrows from 9 to 8 hours. These changes are on the other parties' side, but awareness is important for anyone scheduling across the Dubai–Europe or Dubai–Americas boundary.
Copenhagen operates on Central European Time (CET, UTC+1) in winter and Central European Summer Time (CEST, UTC+2) from late March to late October — the same schedule as Germany, France, and most of Western Europe. Denmark aligned its timekeeping with Germany in 1894 to facilitate rail scheduling across northern Europe. Copenhagen is the financial and commercial capital of Denmark and a regional hub for Scandinavia, hosting the Nordic headquarters of many international corporations.
Denmark experiences strong seasonal daylight variation: Copenhagen (55°N latitude) has about 17.5 hours of daylight at midsummer and only 7 hours in December. This pronounced seasonal light cycle is one reason DST observance matters more at northern latitudes — an extra hour of evening light in summer genuinely shifts activity patterns. The Faroe Islands (autonomous Danish territory) observe Western European Time (WET/WEST, like London), while Greenland uses multiple zones. On mainland Denmark, clocks change on the last Sunday in March and October, following EU rules.
Copenhagen is 6 hours ahead of New York (EST) in winter and 5 hours ahead in summer, making morning overlap relatively easy for trans-Atlantic calls. It is 7 hours behind Tokyo (JST), making Asia–Copenhagen calls challenging. The city's strong export industries (pharmaceuticals, shipping, food) keep it closely integrated with both European and American time rhythms. Maersk, one of the world's largest shipping companies, operates globally from Copenhagen — a business that must coordinate across every timezone on Earth.
Copenhagen is currently 2 hours behind Dubai.
When it is 12:00 noon in Dubai, it is 10:00 in Copenhagen (based on current offsets — verify during DST transitions).
Dubai does not observe DST — GMT+4 is used year-round. Copenhagen observes DST, changing from GMT+1 to GMT+2.