AEST to PST Time Converter
Australian Eastern Standard Time → Pacific Standard Time
AEST (Brisbane) ↔ PST (Los Angeles)
1h of business hours overlap daily (09:00–17:00)
Working hours: 09:00–17:00 local. Green = both working. Purple = one side only.
Australian Eastern Standard Time → Pacific Standard Time
1h of business hours overlap daily (09:00–17:00)
Working hours: 09:00–17:00 local. Green = both working. Purple = one side only.
AEST (Brisbane) is 17 hours ahead of PST (Los Angeles). When AEST (Brisbane) clocks hit noon, PST (Los Angeles) reads 19:00.
AEST (Brisbane) runs on Australia/Brisbane; PST (Los Angeles) runs on America/Los_Angeles. Together they are 17 hours apart.
There is no business hours overlap between AEST (Brisbane) and PST (Los Angeles) during standard working hours (9:00–17:00). Meetings would require one party to work outside normal hours.
AEST (Brisbane) and PST (Los Angeles) have no shared working window. These slots minimize out-of-hours disruption for both sides.
Working hours defined as 09:00–17:00 local time for each location.
⚡ Both locations have upcoming holidays, check availability before scheduling.
Working across AEST (Brisbane) (Australia) and PST (Los Angeles) (USA) is a challenge — the 17-hour difference means no shared business hours window under a standard schedule. Flexibility from at least one side is required.
💡 Best practice for cross-timezone meetings
If you are in AEST (Brisbane), aim for 09:00–10:00, which corresponds to 16:00–17:00 in PST (Los Angeles) — both teams are within working hours.
Since there is no natural overlap, the options above represent the most balanced compromise, minimizing out-of-hours inconvenience for both sides.
Avoid scheduling mistakes — especially around daylight saving changes. Use the ClockinSync Chrome Extension to instantly verify and compare both time zones directly in your browser, without manual calculations.
Add to your browser — Free →Need a specific time? Use the slider or type directly into the input bar — it understands "3pm", "15:30", and location-specific formats like "9am AEST (Brisbane)".