City comparison · time difference and converter
Tokyo is 15 hours ahead of Mexico City right now. Mexico City sits in Mexico on Mexico City; Tokyo sits in Japan on Tokyo. They are roughly 11,310 km apart (7,028 mi), a flight of about 14h 18m. Mexico City's metro holds around 22.5 million people; Tokyo's around 37.4 million.
Slot 1
00:00 / 15:00
Mexico City / Tokyo
Partial overlapSlot 2
01:00 / 16:00
Mexico City / Tokyo
Partial overlapSlot 3
09:00 / 00:00
Mexico City / Tokyo
Partial overlapEach row is one hour in Mexico City. Green rows are inside business hours in both cities; amber means only one side is at their desk; grey rows fall outside business hours in both.
No public holidays in Mexico or Japan this month.
Great-circle distance
11,310 km
(7,028 mi)
Approximate flight
14h 18m
850 km/h cruise + 1h taxi/climb/descent
Jet lag
15h
Roughly 1 day to adjust per timezone crossed
The heatmap gives you the shape of the day. If you need to convert one specific hour — say a customer call or a release window — open the converter with both cities already loaded.
Open in converter →The difference between Mexico City and Tokyo is not really a number, it's a daily rhythm. Tokyo is 15 hours ahead of Mexico City on the clock today, but the lived version is that Tokyo is wrapping up the working day while Mexico City is still in the morning, and the overlap people actually use is narrow. That gap, more than the raw offset, is what teams have to design around.
In Mexico City, the working day picks up earliest in the financial districts — Mexico City's downtown core wakes early and breaks for lunch at the usual hour. The mood in Tokyo is its own story: Shibuya's office workers leave around 19:00, often heading to izakayas, then home on the last train. If you are scheduling between the two, the heatmap above marks the rows where both patterns line up.
Daylight saving is the other thing to keep an eye on. Mexico either observes DST or holds a fixed offset year-round; Japan either follows its region's DST pattern or stays put all year. When the two changes are weeks apart, the offset between Mexico City and Tokyo is one hour off the usual for that stretch — a cliff that catches recurring calendar invites unless your calendar app rebases them automatically. Pin the meeting to a city, not an offset, and the tool handles the rest.
For travellers, the 14h 18m flight is the short version of the story. The longer one is jet lag: roughly one day of adjustment per timezone crossed, which means a trip across the 15-hour gap costs about 15 groggy days on each side. Pilots and cabin crew swear by morning sunlight and an early walk; whatever your routine, the wall-clock numbers above are the source of truth for your first morning in the new city.