

The attendee sees the meeting as starting at 3:00 P.M. Pacific time to an attendee in the United States Mountain time zone. When you send a meeting request to an attendee in a different time zone, the meeting item is displayed at the respective local times on each person's calendar but saved in UTC.įor example, a meeting organizer in the United States Pacific time zone sends a meeting request for 2:00 P.M. The start and end times for items in the Outlook Calendar are saved in the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) format, an international time standard similar to Greenwich Mean Time. On the Calendar tab, under Time zones, clear the Show a second time zone check box and/or the Show a third time zone check box. This option is available only in time zones that use daylight saving time (DST). If you want your computer clock to automatically adjust for daylight saving time (DST) changes, select the Adjust for daylight saving time check box.

In the Time zone list, click the time zone that you want to add. In the Label box for each time zone, type a name for the additional time zone. On the Calendar tab, under Time zones, select the Show a second time zone check box and, if needed, the Show a third time zone check box. The second and third time zones are used only to show a second and third time bar in Calendar view, and do not affect the way in which Calendar items are stored or displayed. The time zones can be, for example, your local time zone, the time zone of another business location, and the time zone of a city that you often travel to. In other versions of Outlook, including Outlook 2019 Volume License, Outlook 2016, Outlook 2013, and Outlook 2010 you can display two time zones. In the latest versions of Outlook for Microsoft 365, three separate time zones can be displayed in the Calendar.
