Los Angeles is UTC−7 (PDT) / UTC−8 (PST). Hong Kong is UTC+8 (GMT+8, no DST). Hong Kong is currently 15 hours ahead of Los Angeles.
There is no overlap of standard business hours (09:00–17:00) between these two cities. Consider early morning or late afternoon calls where one side works slightly outside core hours.
Times shown in Los Angeles local time → Hong Kong local time. Based on business hours 09:00–17:00.
Los Angeles observes Pacific Time: UTC−8 (PST, Pacific Standard Time) in winter and UTC−7 (PDT, Pacific Daylight Time) during DST, which runs from the second Sunday in March to the first Sunday in November. The Pacific Time Zone covers the US West Coast, British Columbia in Canada, and parts of Mexico. Los Angeles is 3 hours behind New York, 8 hours behind London (winter), and 17 hours behind Tokyo — the largest offset between any two major business hubs, making real-time collaboration between LA and Tokyo exceptionally difficult.
California's economy is the fifth largest in the world by GDP, and Los Angeles is its entertainment and technology hub. The entertainment industry's standard workday is broadly 10:00–18:00 PT — slightly later than the East Coast norm — a schedule partly shaped by the city's car culture and long commutes. Silicon Valley, though technically in the San Francisco Bay Area (same timezone), has contributed to a global culture of asynchronous work that somewhat eases the burden of Pacific–European collaboration.
California voters approved Proposition 7 in 2018, which would allow the state legislature to enact year-round DST, but federal law changes are required before the state could actually stop changing its clocks. Until then, LA changes on the same schedule as the rest of the continental US. The Pacific–Eastern 3-hour gap means that Wall Street has been open for three hours by the time most Angelenos start their workday — a feature, not a bug, for West Coast traders who read overnight news before the market opens.
Hong Kong observes Hong Kong Time (HKT, UTC+8) year-round, with no Daylight Saving Time. Hong Kong briefly observed DST during 1941–1945 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) — 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 09:30–16:00 HKT with a lunch break from 12:00 to 13:00 — 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 — typically 09:00–10:00 HKT coincides with London's start-of-day arrival — makes Hong Kong–London 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.
Hong Kong is currently 15 hours ahead of Los Angeles.
When it is 12:00 noon in Los Angeles, it is 03:00 in Hong Kong (based on current offsets — verify during DST transitions).
Los Angeles observes DST, changing from PDT to PST. Hong Kong does not observe DST — GMT+8 is used year-round.