Our free GMT to UTC converter shows what nearly everyone wants to confirm: Greenwich Mean Time and Coordinated Universal Time read the same clock value — both sit at a zero offset. But they are not technically the same thing, and the distinction matters in computing, aviation, and standards work.
For day-to-day conversion the answer is effectively yes — 12:00 PM GMT is 12:00 PM UTC. The difference is in how each is defined: (Definitions follow the IANA Time Zone Database.)
They show the same clock value — both are UTC+0, so 12:00 GMT is 12:00 UTC. The difference is definitional: UTC is the modern atomic standard, while GMT is the historical mean-solar time at Greenwich.
UTC is precisely defined by atomic clocks and is internationally standardized, making it unambiguous for timestamps and protocols. GMT is an older, less precise term that also doubles as the UK's winter time zone.
Mostly to confirm there is no offset and to avoid confusing GMT with UK local time, which becomes BST (UTC+1) in summer. The converter makes the zero-offset relationship explicit.