The short answer: the Philippines (PHT, UTC+8) is 12 hours ahead of US Eastern and 15 hours ahead of US Pacific during US daylight saving (13 and 16 in US winter). The single realistic overlap is the US early morning: around 7:00–9:00 AM ET lands at roughly 7:00–9:00 PM in Manila — the end of the Filipino evening, before the working day truly ends on either side.
The US and the Philippines sit almost exactly half a world apart, so there is no time that is mid-afternoon in both places. As a major outsourcing corridor, many US-Philippines teams simply accept this and run a shifted schedule or work async. When you do need a live call, one narrow window does the job.
How far ahead is the Philippines?
The Philippines keeps a single time zone, Philippine Time, at UTC+8, and it does not change for daylight saving. The US does, so the gap depends on the season and which US coast you are on.
| Your US zone | Ahead of you (US summer) | Ahead of you (US winter) |
|---|---|---|
| Eastern (ET) | 12 hours | 13 hours |
| Central (CT) | 13 hours | 14 hours |
| Mountain (MT) | 14 hours | 15 hours |
| Pacific (PT) | 15 hours | 16 hours |
The one overlap that works
Because the Philippines is so far ahead, your early morning is their evening. The most workable window is the US early morning against the Manila evening, when both sides are still up and roughly available.
| When it is (your time) | In Manila (PHT) | Workable? |
|---|---|---|
| 7:00 AM ET | 7:00 PM | Yes — best window |
| 9:00 AM ET | 9:00 PM | Yes, getting late in Manila |
| 12:00 PM ET | 12:00 AM (midnight) | No |
| 5:00 PM ET | 5:00 AM | No |
From the West Coast the maths is harsher still: 7:00 AM PT is already 10:00 PM in Manila, so the comfortable slice is even smaller. These conversions use US daylight saving; in US winter the same Manila clock time falls an hour later in your morning.
Live call vs async
For a live call, the cleanest overlap is your early morning against the Filipino evening: 7–9 AM ET catches Manila at 7–9 PM, the end of their day. Past that, the window closes fast and one side ends up calling at an unsociable hour.
For async work, many teams in this corridor simply hand off: the US writes up tasks at the end of its day, the Philippines picks them up at the start of theirs, and a single short overlap call keeps everyone aligned. See how to find a team overlap window when more than two zones are involved.
The Philippines never changes its clocks, but the US springs forward in March and falls back in November, so the gap moves by an hour. A recurring call set in summer will land an hour off in winter unless you adjust it. See our guide to calling the Philippines from the US.
Stop checking this every time
With a 12-to-16-hour gap and only one usable window, doing this arithmetic by hand is exactly where the daylight-saving mistakes creep in. Atlas keeps Manila and your own city side by side in your Mac menu bar, shades the few hours when both sides are awake, and writes any meeting to your calendar in both local times. One glance tells you whether now is a good time to call.
Frequently asked
How many hours ahead is the Philippines of the USA?
What is the only good overlap between the US and the Philippines?
Does the Philippines observe daylight saving time?
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