Toronto is UTC−4 (EDT) / UTC−5 (EST). Johannesburg is UTC+2 (GMT+2, no DST). Johannesburg is currently 6 hours ahead of Toronto.
Best times to meet (Toronto local time): 9:00 AM — 3:00 PM in Johannesburg; 10:00 AM — 4:00 PM in Johannesburg.
Times shown in Toronto local time → Johannesburg local time. Based on business hours 09:00–17:00.
Toronto observes Eastern Time: UTC−5 (EST) in winter and UTC−4 (EDT) in summer, following the same schedule as New York and the US East Coast. Canada adopted standard time nationally following the same railway-driven pressures as the United States, with the Railway Committee of the House of Commons standardising time zones in 1918. Toronto is Canada's largest city, its financial capital, and home to the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX), which opens and closes at the same times as the New York Stock Exchange due to the shared timezone.
The synchronisation of Toronto and New York time is economically significant: Bay Street (Toronto's financial district) and Wall Street effectively operate as a single North American market window. Toronto is 5 hours behind London in winter, making early-morning London calls (08:00 GMT = 03:00 EST) impractical, while afternoon London calls (17:00 GMT = 12:00 EST) fall comfortably within Toronto business hours. The Canadian DST rules mirror US federal rules exactly, meaning Toronto and New York never have a temporary offset difference due to mismatched clock-change dates.
Canada's geography spans six time zones, from Newfoundland Time (UTC−3:30) to Pacific Time (UTC−8), making pan-Canadian scheduling a notable challenge for national companies. Toronto's Eastern Time creates a 3-hour spread between Toronto and Vancouver (PT), meaning a 09:00 Toronto call begins at 06:00 in Vancouver — before most people are awake. Internationally, Toronto's UTC−5 winter offset places it equidistant (in hours) between London (+5 hours ahead) and Los Angeles (−3 hours behind), making it a convenient scheduling hub for trans-Atlantic and trans-continental North American meetings.
Johannesburg observes South Africa Standard Time (SAST, UTC+2) year-round, with no Daylight Saving Time. South Africa experimented with DST during the 1940s (wartime energy conservation) but has not observed it since 1944, making SAST one of the world's long-established fixed offsets. UTC+2 is shared by Egypt (EET, which does observe DST), Zimbabwe, Zambia, Mozambique, and several other sub-Saharan African countries, making it a common anchor for pan-African business scheduling.
Johannesburg is Africa's financial powerhouse and home to the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), the largest exchange on the African continent. The JSE operates 09:00–17:00 SAST. Johannesburg's UTC+2 position gives it 2 hours ahead of London (GMT), making it one of the easiest African cities for European morning calls — a 09:00 London call is 11:00 in Johannesburg, well within business hours. It is 7 hours ahead of New York (EST) in winter, which means a New York 09:00 call begins at 16:00 SAST — pushing the edges of the Johannesburg business day.
South Africa's lack of DST means the country's offset to summer-time Europe changes seasonally: when London is on BST (UTC+1) in summer, the London–Johannesburg gap narrows from 2 hours to 1 hour. When New York is on EDT (UTC−4) in summer, the New York–Johannesburg gap narrows from 7 to 6 hours. These are small but real differences that matter for precise scheduling. Johannesburg is at 26°S latitude, giving it moderate seasonal daylight variation — roughly 14 hours of daylight in December and 10 hours in June — making the absence of DST a minor inconvenience at most.
Johannesburg is currently 6 hours ahead of Toronto.
When it is 12:00 noon in Toronto, it is 18:00 in Johannesburg (based on current offsets — verify during DST transitions).
Toronto observes DST, changing from EDT to EST. Johannesburg does not observe DST — GMT+2 is used year-round.