Daylight saving time starts this weekend, letting people “spring forward” one hour to shift more daylight into the evening hours. DST will start on Sunday, March 9 with the changeover officially taking place at 2 a.
For the past four months, we’ve been on standard time. But overnight Saturday, we’ll turn our clocks ahead one hour at 2 a.m., effectively making it 3 a.m. (So don’t schedule any important meetings at 2:30 a.m., because that time won’t exist Sunday — and is not a great time for a meeting, anyway).
What date does daylight saving time start? Do we gain or lose an hour in March? Will Trump end DST? What we know about when clocks spring forward in 2025.
Those are the places under U.S. jurisdiction that do not observe the manifest folly of Daylight Saving Time, and will be leaving their clocks and watches exactly as they are when the rest of us are dialing ours an hour forward on Sunday,
It's time to "spring forward." Daylight Saving Time begins this month. Here's everything you need to know about the seasonal practice.
If you live in these states, you won't have to change your clocks for the start of daylight saving time on Sunday.
Losing an hour of sleep as daylight saving time kicks in can do more than leave you tired and cranky the next day — it also could harm your health.
Daylight saving time to change this weekend. Will Trump end DST? See reactions to Elon Musk's X / Twitter poll before the US springs forward in 2025.
Every year there’s talk about ending the time change. In December, then-President-elect Donald Trump promised to eliminate daylight saving time. For the last several years, a bipartisan bill named the Sunshine Protection Act to make daylight saving time permanent has stalled in Congress; it has been reintroduced this year.
In a few days, millions of Americans will turn their clocks forward, marking the start of Daylight Saving Time in 2025. The controversial practice of "springing forward" and "falling back" has been observed in most states, including Ohio, for decades.