Get timezone from users browser using moment(timezone).js

When using moment.js, use:

var tz = moment.tz.guess();

It will return an IANA time zone identifier, such as America/Los_Angeles for the US Pacific time zone.

It is documented here.

Internally, it first tries to get the time zone from the browser using the following call:

Intl.DateTimeFormat().resolvedOptions().timeZone

If you are targeting only modern browsers that support this function, and you don't need Moment-Timezone for anything else, then you can just call that directly.

If Moment-Timezone doesn't get a valid result from that function, or if that function doesn't exist, then it will "guess" the time zone by testing several different dates and times against the Date object to see how it behaves. The guess is usually a good enough approximation, but not guaranteed to exactly match the time zone setting of the computer.


var timedifference = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();

This returns the difference from the clients timezone from UTC time. You can then play around with it as you like.


All current answers provide the offset differece at current time, not at a given date.

moment(date).utcOffset() returns the time difference in minutes between browser time and UTC at the date passed as argument (or today, if no date passed).

Here's a function to parse correct offset at the picked date:

function getUtcOffset(date) {
  return moment(date)
    .subtract(
      moment(date).utcOffset(), 
      'minutes')
    .utc()
}