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Home/ Questions/Q 611051
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T17:44:30+00:00 2026-05-13T17:44:30+00:00

I’ve got times saved in a sql database in utc format. I’m displaying those

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I’ve got times saved in a sql database in utc format. I’m displaying those times on a gridview, however they are still UTC format. I’d like to convert them to the client’s browsers local time. The problem is that although I can get the timezone offset that is only for the current date/time. That offset could change if some of those dates in the future end up occuring during daylight savings time. I’m relatively new to web programming but it seems like what I need to do is run some Javascript as each entry binds to the gridview that somehow takes the C# datetimeoffset object and converts it to a local time. Or maybe that’s not possible?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T17:44:31+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 5:44 pm

    This can be done on the server side if you have a TimeZoneInfo object. You can use the static ConvertTimeFromUtc() method.

    In C#:

    DateTime localTime = TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTimeFromUtc(myDbDateTime, myTimeZoneInfo);
    

    If you do not have the timezone on the server side things get tricky since javascript does not provide the client’s timezone (unless they are in the US, and even then only on some browsers). In this case, it may be best to force the user to select their current timezone and store it against their account. If this is being displayed to anonymous users, you should probably display in UTC by default and provide an option to refresh it for a selected timezone.

    Update

    There are several issues which appear when trying to automatically determine a user’s timezone.

    1. Timezone is not provided to the server by the user agent.
    2. Javascript does not provide access to the timezone (except in some browsers, sometimes).

    The javascript function getTimezoneOffset() may initially sound like a good idea, but since there are multiple timezones with the same offset, this is not a unique value. The difference between many of these non-unique zones is their implementation of daylight saving time.

    Example: Indiana does not regard DST. Therefore, for half the year their offset matches eastern time, while the other half their offset is equal to central time.

    If, however, your user base is located primarily in the US and uses IE, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox, than you can use the toString() method on a Date object to obtain the timezone. These browsers append the timezone to the date string in different ways. Outside the US, the timezone is not included in all browsers (though some may still show it).

    Open http://jsbin.com/onulo3 to observe:
    IE8: Sun Feb 14 22:12:22 EST 2010
    Chrome: Sun Feb 14 2010 22:12:22 GMT-0500 (Eastern Standard Time)
    Safari: Sun Feb 14 2010 22:12:22 GMT-0500 (Eastern Standard Time)
    Firefox: Sun Feb 14 2010 22:12:22 GMT-0500 (Eastern Standard Time)

    With some parsing, you can now determine the timezone for all your American users. For everyone else you can display the time in UTC (with a notice to that effect).

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