2026-03-23

EPG Showing the Wrong Time? How to Fix Guide Offset | DaddyTV

If your IPTV guide shows the wrong time, the problem is usually a timezone mismatch, stale XMLTV assumptions, or a provider-side guide issue. Use this DaddyTV checklist to diagnose EPG offset cleanly.

EPG showing the wrong time? How to fix guide offset

An EPG time offset is frustrating because it creates a setup that looks almost correct. The guide appears, but the schedule feels shifted, early, or late enough to make the timeline unreliable.

That usually points to a different problem than EPG not showing or channel mapping.

The best first step is to classify the issue correctly.

Quick answer

If the guide shows the wrong time, check these first:

  1. whether the guide itself is loading correctly

  2. whether the problem affects all channels or only some

  3. whether the source changed recently

  4. whether the issue belongs to the XMLTV feed rather than the player

  5. whether you are trying to solve an offset problem with a full source reset

Offset issues are narrower than full guide failures. Treating them as the same problem usually wastes time.

Wrong time vs missing guide

These problems look related, but they are different.

Missing guide

  • no rows

  • no schedule

  • nothing useful appears

Wrong-time guide

  • schedule exists

  • rows are visible

  • the timeline is shifted or inconsistent

That is why the best reference article depends on the symptom. If guide data is missing completely, use XMLTV EPG Not Showing?. If the guide is present but shifted, stay focused on offset logic.

When the XMLTV source is the likely cause

The guide feed is often the first suspect when:

  • the same issue affects the full lineup

  • the shift appeared after a feed change

  • playback works normally

  • channel structure looks fine, but schedule timing feels globally off

In those situations, rebuilding the playback source rarely helps because playback was never the broken layer.

What to check before reimporting

Before you start over, verify:

  1. whether the guide issue is consistent across the lineup

  2. whether the feed came from the same source as before

  3. whether the provider recently changed guide data

  4. whether you are looking at a mapping problem instead of a time problem

This matters because a wrong-time guide and a mismatched channel map can sometimes look similar from a distance.

If you are not sure which category fits better, compare against XMLTV Channel Mapping Explained.

Channel-specific offset vs lineup-wide offset

This distinction helps a lot.

If almost every guide entry looks shifted in the same way, the issue is probably global to the feed or the way the feed is being interpreted.

If only a few channels look wrong, the problem may be narrower and more related to lineup alignment than pure timing.

That is why users should avoid describing every guide issue as "the whole EPG is broken." The pattern matters.

Why users lose time on this problem

The most common mistakes are:

  • deleting the source even though playback works

  • retrying the same XMLTV setup without checking what changed

  • assuming every guide issue is a player bug

  • escalating to support without documenting the pattern

The faster method is to observe the symptom first and only then decide whether the feed, the match, or the player state needs attention.

When the provider feed is the real issue

Sometimes the cleanest answer is that the guide feed itself is weak or outdated.

Typical signals:

  • the issue started without app-side changes

  • the lineup still plays correctly

  • the guide is visible, but timing looks wrong across the board

  • retries inside the player do not change the pattern

That does not mean the app is irrelevant. It means the player cannot repair bad schedule data upstream.

A cleaner escalation note for guide-time issues

If you need help from a provider or support team, send something more concrete than "EPG is wrong."

A stronger message includes:

  • whether the issue affects all channels or only some

  • whether playback is still normal

  • whether the guide appeared correct before

  • whether the timing error is consistent

  • whether the feed was recently updated or changed

That kind of note gives the other side something to investigate.

When not to blame timezone immediately

Users often jump to timezone as the first explanation because it sounds technical and plausible. Sometimes that is correct, but not always.

Do not assume timezone is the whole issue when:

  • only a few channels are affected

  • the guide is also mismatched in other ways

  • the timing problem started after a lineup or feed change

Those patterns can point to a broader guide mismatch rather than a pure offset problem.

How DaddyTV fits the troubleshooting flow

DaddyTV works best when each layer is handled independently:

  • source import for playback

  • XMLTV for guide data

  • troubleshooting based on the exact symptom instead of a general reset

That makes guide offset easier to diagnose because you can keep the working playback source intact while narrowing the guide problem.

The main guide-focused product page is XMLTV EPG player. The broader decision tree lives in IPTV Troubleshooting Hub.

What to document before contacting support

If you need to escalate, collect:

  • whether all channels are affected or only some

  • whether playback is normal

  • when the timing issue started

  • whether the feed changed recently

  • what refresh or reset steps you already tried

This turns a vague support message into something actionable.

If you still need help after that, use Contact.

FAQ

Does wrong EPG time mean the playlist is broken?

Usually no. A time offset is often a guide-layer issue, not a playback-source issue.

Should I delete and re-add the whole source first?

Not unless you have evidence that the playback source itself is wrong. Start with the guide diagnosis.

Is this the same as channel mapping?

Not always. Mapping is about which guide belongs to which channel. Offset is about when the schedule appears on the timeline.

When should I stop troubleshooting and escalate?

When the pattern is clear, repeatable, and still present after one clean guide-focused retry.

Can only a few channels have the wrong time?

Yes, and when that happens the issue may be narrower than a lineup-wide offset.

Final takeaway

An EPG time offset is usually not a general IPTV failure. It is a guide-layer problem that should be diagnosed on its own.

The safest path is:

  • confirm the guide exists

  • separate offset from mapping and missing-data issues

  • keep playback troubleshooting separate

  • only escalate after you know the pattern

If your goal is better guide behavior overall, the product path starts with XMLTV EPG player.

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