# Get The Current Time Working with time and time zones in server development can get complicated. Time-sensitive code that worked locally can unexpected fail when deployed to a server in a different time zone. Or users can end up seeing timestamps that look a few hours off. To avoid this kinds of mistakes in Rails development, we should avoid using `Time.now` and instead use `Time.current`. > Rails saves timestamps to the database in UTC time zone. We should always use > Time.current for any database queries, so that Rails will translate and > compare the correct times. ```ruby > Time.zone => #, @utc_offset=nil> > Time.now => 2021-01-28 19:22:42.312577 -0600 > Time.current => Fri, 29 Jan 2021 01:22:45.926181000 UTC +00:00 > Time.zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)' => "Eastern Time (US & Canada)" > Time.now => 2021-01-28 19:23:28.255106 -0600 > Time.current => Thu, 28 Jan 2021 20:23:32.150545000 EST -05:00 ``` My server's default time zone is UTC. `Time.now` gives me my computer's system time (Central Time). `Time.current` gives me the time in UTC. If I then change the server's time zone to Eastern Time, `Time.now` still offers up my system time whereas `Time.current` produces the current time in Easter Time. [source](https://thoughtbot.com/blog/its-about-time-zones)