AEST EST Time Converter

Convert AEST to EST instantly. Australian Eastern Standard Time is UTC+10 / UTC+11 (AEDT) and Eastern Standard Time is UTC-5 / UTC-4 (EDT) — a 15h difference. Enter any time in either field — both fully editable. Click ⇄ to swap directions.

🕐 Live Current Times

AEST
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Australian Eastern Standard Time
15h behind
⇄ EST→AEST
EST
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Eastern Standard Time

⚡ Bidirectional Time Converter

AEST (UTC+10 / UTC+11 (AEDT)) → EST (UTC-5 / UTC-4 (EDT)) · Difference: 15h behind (auto-adjusts for DST)

ℹ️ Timezone Details

AEST Offset
UTC+10 / UTC+11 (AEDT)
EST Offset
UTC-5 / UTC-4 (EDT)
Difference
15h behind
AEST Full Name
Australian Eastern Standard Time
EST Full Name
Eastern Standard Time

🤝 Best Meeting Hours Between AEST and EST

Because EST is 15h behind of AEST, morning slots in the earlier zone generally line up with afternoon or evening in the later zone. Use this table to find windows where both sides fall within reasonable working hours.

AESTESTSuitability
7:00 AM4:00 PMGood — early start
8:00 AM5:00 PMBest overlap
9:00 AM6:00 PMBest overlap
10:00 AM7:00 PMBest overlap
11:00 AM8:00 PMGood — late window

🏙️ Cities Covered by Each Time Zone

AEST Cities
Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Canberra, Hobart, Newcastle, Gold Coast
EST Cities
New York, Washington DC, Boston, Atlanta, Miami, Philadelphia, Toronto

📌 Zone Notes — AEST & EST

AEST: Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST) is UTC+10. New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, and the ACT observe Daylight Saving Time and shift to AEDT (UTC+11) during Australian summer (October to early April). Queensland, however, does not observe DST and stays at AEST/UTC+10 all year. The live clocks on this page use the Sydney/Melbourne IANA zone, which includes the DST shift. If you are scheduling with Brisbane specifically, note that Queensland remains at UTC+10 during the AEDT period.

🌤️ Daylight Saving Time (DST) — What to Know

Both AEST and EST observe DST, though their transition dates may differ. When both shift simultaneously the offset stays the same; during brief windows when only one has transitioned the gap differs by one hour. The live converter always reflects the accurate real-time offset.

📋 Full 24-Hour Conversion Table — AEST to EST

AEST (12h)AEST (24h)EST (12h)EST (24h)DayType
12:00 AM00:009:00 AM09:00-1 DayNight
1:00 AM01:0010:00 AM10:00-1 DayNight
2:00 AM02:0011:00 AM11:00-1 DayNight
3:00 AM03:0012:00 PM12:00-1 DayNight
4:00 AM04:001:00 PM13:00-1 DayNight
5:00 AM05:002:00 PM14:00-1 DayNight
6:00 AM06:003:00 PM15:00-1 Day
7:00 AM07:004:00 PM16:00-1 Day
8:00 AM08:005:00 PM17:00-1 Day
9:00 AM09:006:00 PM18:00-1 DayBusiness
10:00 AM10:007:00 PM19:00-1 DayBusiness
11:00 AM11:008:00 PM20:00-1 DayBusiness
12:00 PM12:009:00 PM21:00-1 DayBusiness
1:00 PM13:0010:00 PM22:00-1 DayBusiness
2:00 PM14:0011:00 PM23:00-1 DayBusiness
3:00 PM15:0012:00 AM00:00Business
4:00 PM16:001:00 AM01:00Business
5:00 PM17:002:00 AM02:00Business
6:00 PM18:003:00 AM03:00
7:00 PM19:004:00 AM04:00
8:00 PM20:005:00 AM05:00
9:00 PM21:006:00 AM06:00
10:00 PM22:007:00 AM07:00Night
11:00 PM23:008:00 AM08:00Night

Table uses the fixed standard offset of 15h behind. During DST transitions the actual gap may shift by one hour — use the live converter above which adjusts automatically.

🔗 Related Converters

💡 How to Convert AEST to EST

1
Find the offset — Australian Eastern Standard Time is UTC+10 / UTC+11 (AEDT) and Eastern Standard Time is UTC-5 / UTC-4 (EDT). Difference: 15h behind.
2
Use either field — Type in the AEST box for the EST result, or type in the EST box for the AEST result. Both update instantly.
3
Swap directions — Click ⇄ to reverse, or visit the EST to AEST page.
4
Check the table — The 24-hour table shows every hour converted; business hours in green, late-night in orange. Click any row to load it into the converter.
5
Watch for day changes — "+1 Day" or "-1 Day" flags appear automatically when a conversion crosses midnight, so you never book on the wrong date.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions — AEST to EST

What is the time difference between AEST and EST?

Eastern Standard Time (EST) is 15h behind of Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST). AEST runs at UTC+10 / UTC+11 (AEDT) and EST at UTC-5 / UTC-4 (EDT). Quick time examples: 8:00 AM AEST = 5:00 PM EST; 12:00 PM AEST = 9:00 PM EST; 5:00 PM AEST = 2:00 AM EST.

How do I convert AEST to EST manually?

To convert AEST to EST, subtract 15 hours to the AEST time. For example, 12:00 PM AEST becomes 9:00 PM EST. When the result crosses midnight, advance the date by one day (shown as "+1 Day" in the converter). The converter on this page handles all arithmetic and date-rollover automatically.

Is EST ahead of or behind AEST?

Eastern Standard Time (EST) is 15h behind of Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST). Reversed: AEST is 15h ahead of EST. Practical example: noon in New York (12:00 PM EST) corresponds to 3:00 AM AEST in Sydney, and 5 PM in New York corresponds to 8:00 AM AEST.

What is AEST — Australian Eastern Standard Time?

Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST) is the standard civil time for Sydney and the surrounding region, operating at UTC+10 / UTC+11 (AEDT) from UTC. It observes Daylight Saving Time and advances its clocks by one hour during summer — the effective offset changes seasonally. Major cities: Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Canberra, Hobart, Newcastle, Gold Coast.

What is EST — Eastern Standard Time?

Eastern Standard Time (EST) covers New York and the surrounding region at UTC-5 / UTC-4 (EDT) from UTC. It observes Daylight Saving Time and shifts its clocks seasonally. Cities in this zone: New York, Washington DC, Boston, Atlanta, Miami, Philadelphia, Toronto.

Does Daylight Saving Time affect the AEST to EST difference?

Both AEST and EST observe Daylight Saving Time, though their transition dates may not align. When both zones shift simultaneously the offset stays unchanged; during brief transition windows when only one has moved, the gap differs by one hour. The live converter handles this using the browser's IANA timezone data.

What is the best time to schedule a meeting between AEST and EST?

The best meeting window is where standard working hours (9 AM – 6 PM) overlap in both zones. Since EST is 15h behind of AEST, mornings in the earlier zone align with afternoons or evenings in the later zone. Target 8 AM – 11 AM in the earlier-offset zone to keep both sides in reasonable hours. The meeting hours table above shows the exact recommended slots for this pair. Any time where one side falls before 7 AM or after 9 PM is best avoided for regular team calls.

How do I convert EST back to AEST?

Type any time directly into the EST field in the bidirectional converter above — it instantly shows the AEST result. Alternatively, add 15 hours from the EST time manually. For a dedicated reverse page, visit: EST to AEST converter ↗.

Do AEST to EST conversions cross midnight?

Yes — this is a large offset, and many hours will cross midnight. When the converted time passes 11:59 PM, the date advances — the converter shows "+1 Day". When it goes before 12:00 AM, the date moves back — "-1 Day" appears. The 24-hour reference table also shows day changes in the Day column. Always check the date indicator when sending calendar invites across these two zones to avoid accidentally booking on the wrong date.

Which cities and countries use AEST?

Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST) is used in: Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Canberra, Hobart, Newcastle, Gold Coast. The zone operates at UTC+10 / UTC+11 (AEDT)and shifts by one hour during DST.

Which cities and countries use EST?

Eastern Standard Time (EST) covers: New York, Washington DC, Boston, Atlanta, Miami, Philadelphia, Toronto. It runs at UTC-5 / UTC-4 (EDT)and observes Daylight Saving Time seasonally. Use the live clocks at the top of this page to see the current local time in both zones side by side.

Is 15h behind always the exact difference between AEST and EST?

The standard offset is 15h behind, but this can shift by one hour during DST transition periods. Both zones observe DST, so during transition windows the gap may temporarily differ. The live converter always shows the current accurate offset.

How do I set up a recurring calendar event between AEST and EST?

When creating a recurring meeting that spans AEST and EST, set the event timezone in your calendar app using the IANA timezone names: Australia/Sydney for AEST and America/New_York for EST. Using IANA names rather than fixed UTC offsets ensures the calendar app automatically adjusts future occurrences for any DST changes, so you never accidentally schedule at the wrong time after a clock transition. For a quick lookup of any specific time, the converter on this page is the fastest way to verify both sides before you send the invite.

What is the difference between AEST and AEDT?

AEST (Australian Eastern Standard Time) is UTC+10 and applies during Australian winter (approximately April to October). AEDT (Australian Eastern Daylight Time) is UTC+11 and applies during Australian summer (October to April), when New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, and the ACT move their clocks forward. Queensland does not observe DST and stays at AEST/UTC+10 all year. The live converter on this page uses the Sydney/Melbourne zone which switches between AEST and AEDT automatically — if you are scheduling specifically with Brisbane (Queensland), subtract one hour from any AEDT result during the October–April period.