Hong Kong is UTC+8 (GMT+8, no DST). Berlin is UTC+1 (GMT+1) / UTC+2 (GMT+2). Berlin is currently 6 hours behind Hong Kong.
Best times to meet (Hong Kong local time): 3:00 PM β 9:00 AM in Berlin; 4:00 PM β 10:00 AM in Berlin.
Times shown in Hong Kong local time β Berlin local time. Based on business hours 09:00β17:00.
Hong Kong observes Hong Kong Time (HKT, UTC+8) year-round, with no Daylight Saving Time. Hong Kong briefly observed DST during 1941β1945 and 1946, but has not changed its clocks since 1979, when it permanently abandoned the practice. HKT is identical to China Standard Time (CST), Singapore Standard Time (SGT), Malaysia Time (MYT), the Philippines Standard Time (PST), and Western Australia Standard Time (AWST) β all at UTC+8, making it the world's most widely shared standard timezone offset by number of countries and territories.
Hong Kong is one of the world's leading international financial centres. The Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEX) operates 09:30β16:00 HKT with a lunch break from 12:00 to 13:00 β making it notable among major exchanges for retaining a midday pause. The daily turnover on HKEX is among the world's highest, and it serves as the primary gateway between China's capital markets and the rest of the world. Hong Kong's UTC+8 position means it opens about 90 minutes after Tokyo (UTC+9) and about an hour before the Shanghai/Shenzhen exchanges, giving it a slightly earlier start in the region.
Hong Kong is 8 hours ahead of London (GMT) in winter and 7 hours ahead when London is on BST, 13 hours ahead of New York (EST) and 12 hours ahead when New York is on EDT. The narrow overlap with European business hours β typically 09:00β10:00 HKT coincides with London's start-of-day arrival β makes Hong KongβLondon conference calls a morning Hong Kong ritual for finance professionals. Despite the same UTC+8 offset as Beijing, Hong Kong maintains its own timezone identity and IANA zone (Asia/Hong_Kong), reflecting its distinct administrative status.
Berlin observes Central European Time (CET, UTC+1) in winter and Central European Summer Time (CEST, UTC+2) in summer, identical to Paris, Amsterdam, Rome, Madrid, and most of Western and Central Europe. Germany adopted CET in 1893 as part of the Railway Time harmonisation effort, making it one of the earliest national standard-time adoptions in the world. Berlin is the capital and largest city of Germany, and the country's economic powerhouse β Germany has the third-largest economy globally by GDP.
The reunification of Germany in 1990 required East Germany (which had used the same CET zone under Soviet influence) to formally merge its time administration with West Germany β a symbolic as well as practical step. Berlin's financial scene is smaller than Frankfurt (Germany's banking capital), but the city hosts many tech companies, startups, and creative industries whose global collaboration spans from New York (UTCβ5, a 6-hour gap in winter) to Singapore (UTC+8, a 7-hour gap). The EU's Daylight Saving Time rules apply uniformly, meaning Germany changes clocks on the same weekend as France and all other EU member states.
Germany is a major exporter and manufacturer, with business heavily oriented toward Asia (especially China and Japan) and the United States. The 6β7 hour time difference to the US East Coast and the 7-hour difference to East Asia means that German engineers and salespeople frequently take early-morning or late-evening calls to avoid complete schedule misalignment. Berlin is 1 hour behind Helsinki and Athens, and 2 hours ahead of London in summer (when UK is on BST and Germany is on CEST).
Berlin is currently 6 hours behind Hong Kong.
When it is 12:00 noon in Hong Kong, it is 06:00 in Berlin (based on current offsets β verify during DST transitions).
Hong Kong does not observe DST β GMT+8 is used year-round. Berlin observes DST, changing from GMT+1 to GMT+2.