What Time Zone Is Sweden In?
Sweden uses a single timezone: the primary designation is Europe/Paris, which is currently UTC+01:00 from Coordinated Universal Time. The IANA Time Zone Database , the authoritative global reference used by operating systems, web services, and programming languages worldwide, lists this as Europe/Paris.
Regional Context
Northern Europe comprises the Nordic and Baltic countries, where timezone politics intersect with extreme seasonal light variation. Iceland (Atlantic/Reykjavik, UTC+00:00) is unique: it abolished Daylight Saving Time in 1968, operating on UTC+00:00 year-round despite being geographically west of London. The remaining Nordic countries, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, observe CET/CEST (UTC+01:00 and UTC+02:00 in summer). At 60-70°N latitude, these countries experience midnight sun in summer and polar night in winter. The timezone offset becomes almost irrelevant during the extremes: solar noon in Tromsø, Norway (69.6°N) varies from 12:00 solar in December to near-midnight solar in June. All Northern European nations except Iceland coordinate DST on the last Sunday of March and October under EU Directive 2000/84/EC.
Current Time in Stockholm
The capital city Stockholm observes the Europe/Paris timezone, currently at UTC+01:00. The live clock above updates every second using your browser's Intl.DateTimeFormat API with the IANA zone identifier. To convert Stockholm time to UTC, subtract the offset shown: Stockholm's local time minus 01:00 hours equals UTC.
Daylight Saving Time in Sweden
The DST status for Sweden is shown in the indicator above. When DST is in effect, clocks advance by one hour, temporarily shifting Sweden's UTC offset by +1. Countries that do not observe DST, including Japan, China, India, and most of Africa, maintain a fixed offset year-round. The IANA Time Zone Database contains the complete historical record of DST transitions for Europe/Paris, including past rule changes and future scheduled transitions.
Scheduling Calls With Sweden
When arranging calls or meetings with contacts in Sweden, standard business hours run 09:00 to 18:00 local time (Europe/Paris). In UTC, that window is 08:45 to 17:45 UTC. The time difference tool on this site calculates the overlap between any two cities' business hours, so you can find the shared window without mental arithmetic. If you're in a different country, visit the time difference page for your city vs. Stockholmfor a full hour-by-hour breakdown.
Timezone Abbreviation for Sweden
The GMT+1 abbreviation appears on airline tickets, broadcast schedules, and financial contracts when referencing Sweden time. Timezone abbreviations are not globally unique, IST, for example, can mean India Standard Time (UTC+05:30), Irish Standard Time (UTC+01:00), or Israel Standard Time (UTC+02:00). The IANA identifier Europe/Paris is unambiguous: it maps to exactly one timezone in the world. When writing times for a global audience, always include both the abbreviation and the UTC offset to prevent misreading. The IANA Time Zone Database records every past and future rule change for Europe/Paris, making it the only reliable reference for historical time conversions.
Calling Sweden from Abroad
International callers reach Sweden using the code +46. Standard business hours run 09:00 to 18:00 local (Europe/Paris), which in UTC is 08:45 to 17:45 UTC. The best window for international calls is 10:00 to 16:00 Sweden local time, after the morning rush and before post-17:00 wind-down. Mobile coverage in Stockholm follows local carrier standards. International roaming calls to Sweden are billed at the caller's international rate, not the local Sweden rate.
Currency and Banking Hours in Sweden
Domestic banks in Stockholm operate on Europe/Paris time. Wire transfers, invoice settlements, and currency conversions must typically be initiated before 17:00 Sweden local time to be processed same-day. The forex market trades 24 hours, but domestic banking settlement in Sweden follows Europe/Paris business hours. When sending international transfers to Sweden, factor in the UTC offset (UTC+01:00) to ensure your instruction arrives before the local cut-off time. Same-day settlement typically requires initiation before 14:45 UTC.
Sweden: A Single-Zone Country
Sweden observes a single timezone nationwide: Europe/Paris (UTC+01:00). Single-zone countries have a scheduling advantage, there is no ambiguity about which zone a meeting time refers to, and businesses across the country share the same clock. This simplifies domestic commerce, broadcast scheduling, and government coordination.