Paris is currently 2 hours behind Dubai. Convert time between Paris and Dubai, see the exact difference, and find the best hours for calls and meetings.
Paris uses Central European Summer Time. Dubai uses Gulf Standard Time. Paris time is 2 hours behind Dubai. So, when it is 12:00 AM in Paris, it is 2:00 AM in Dubai.
Common Paris times and their Dubai equivalents.
| Paris Time | Dubai Time |
|---|---|
| 12:00 AM Paris | 2:00 AM Dubai |
| 1:00 AM Paris | 3:00 AM Dubai |
| 2:00 AM Paris | 4:00 AM Dubai |
| 3:00 AM Paris | 5:00 AM Dubai |
| 4:00 AM Paris | 6:00 AM Dubai |
| 5:00 AM Paris | 7:00 AM Dubai |
| 6:00 AM Paris | 8:00 AM Dubai |
| 7:00 AM Paris | 9:00 AM Dubai |
| 8:00 AM Paris | 10:00 AM Dubai |
| 9:00 AM Paris | 11:00 AM Dubai |
| 10:00 AM Paris | 12:00 PM Dubai |
| 11:00 AM Paris | 1:00 PM Dubai |
| 12:00 PM Paris | 2:00 PM Dubai |
| 1:00 PM Paris | 3:00 PM Dubai |
| 2:00 PM Paris | 4:00 PM Dubai |
| 3:00 PM Paris | 5:00 PM Dubai |
| 4:00 PM Paris | 6:00 PM Dubai |
| 5:00 PM Paris | 7:00 PM Dubai |
| 6:00 PM Paris | 8:00 PM Dubai |
| 7:00 PM Paris | 9:00 PM Dubai |
| 8:00 PM Paris | 10:00 PM Dubai |
| 9:00 PM Paris | 11:00 PM Dubai |
| 10:00 PM Paris | 12:00 AM Dubai |
| 11:00 PM Paris | 1:00 AM Dubai |
Paris (and all of metropolitan France) uses Central European Time (CET, UTC+1) in winter and Central European Summer Time (CEST, UTC+2) in summer. EU clocks change on the last Sunday of March and the last Sunday of October, the same schedule as most of continental Europe.
Dubai and the UAE use Gulf Standard Time (GST, UTC+4) year-round with no Daylight Saving Time. The fixed offset makes Dubai scheduling predictable throughout the year. As a major financial and logistics hub, GST is a widely used timezone in the Middle East and South Asia corridor.
Both Paris and Dubai may observe Daylight Saving Time, which means the offset between them can change twice a year. Here is what to expect each season.
| Period | Note | Paris | Dubai | Offset |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nov – Mar | Both on standard time | GMT+1 (UTC+1) | GMT+4 (UTC+4) | 3 hours |
| Mar – late Mar | US clocks forward, some zones still on standard | GMT+1 (UTC+1) | GMT+4 (UTC+4) | 3 hours |
| Late Mar – Oct current | Both on summer / daylight time | GMT+2 (UTC+2) | GMT+4 (UTC+4) | 2 hours |
| Late Oct – early Nov | Clocks transitioning — check exact date | GMT+1 (UTC+1) | GMT+4 (UTC+4) | 3 hours |
The transition window typically lasts 1–2 weeks in spring and autumn. If you have a recurring weekly meeting near a clock change, verify the exact date to avoid a missed call.
Paris is currently 2 hours behind Dubai. Paris uses Central European Summer Time (UTC+2) and Dubai uses Gulf Standard Time (UTC+4).
The best overlap window is 9:00 am–4:00 pm Paris time, which corresponds to 11:00 am–6:00 pm Dubai time. Both cities are within standard business hours (9 am–6 pm) during this window.
When it is 9:00 AM in Paris, it is 11:00 am in Dubai. Paris is 2 hours behind Dubai.
When it is 5:00 PM in Dubai, it is 3:00 pm in Paris.
Paris observes Daylight Saving Time but Dubai does not. This means the offset between the two cities changes by one hour when Paris transitions its clocks — typically in late March (spring forward) and late October (fall back). Always verify the current offset when scheduling around those dates.