Context Help: Time

OpenFlights tries to understand local time, so you can enter local departure and arrival times and have the actual flight duration computed automatically. If you enter only a departure time, OpenFlights will estimate the flight duration based on the length of the flight and suggest an arrival time.

To see the time zones and DST status of current airports when adding or editing flights, hover your mouse over the icon.

Consistency

Internal consistency between date, time, flight duration and flight distance is enforced as follows:

Changing this... recalculates these
Arrival timeDurationDistance
AirportYesYesYes
Arrival timeYesNo
DurationYesNo
DistanceNoNo
DateYesNoNo
Departure timeYesNoNo

Time zones

OpenFlights uses UTC offsets as time zones, so UTC+8 (Singapore) is recorded as "+8" and UTC-5 (New York) as "-5". Time zone data for OpenFlights was obtained from EarthTools.

Daylight Savings Time (DST)

When active, Daylight Savings Time (DST), or "summer time", adds one to the normal timezone, so e.g. New York, normally UTC-5, becomes UTC-4 while DST is active. OpenFlights currently understands the following types of DST:

The rules for DST change constantly and not all airports are up-to-date or marked correctly. Please contact the OpenFlights team if you find any errors.

Examples

A flight in April departs Singapore (SIN) at 20:00 and arrives in Chennai (MAA) at 21:30. Singapore is UTC+8, Chennai is UTC+5.5. Flight duration is thus (21:30-20:00) - (05:30-08:00) = 1:30 - (-2:30) = 4:00.

A flight in June departs Newark (EWR) at 23:00 and arrives in Singapore (SIN) at 07:40 + 2 days. Singapore is UTC+8, New York is UTC-4 (DST). Flight duration is thus (07:40+48:00)-23:00 - (-04:00-08:00) = -32:40 - -(12:00) = 20:40.