Daylight Saving Time 2028
Daylight Saving Time 2028 starts on Sunday, March 12 and ends on Sunday, November 5. Clocks spring forward 1 hour in March and fall back 1 hour in November.
🕐 Daylight Saving Time 2028: Daylight Saving Time 2028 starts on Sunday, March 12 and ends on Sunday, November 5. Clocks spring forward 1 hour in March and fall back 1 hour in November. See the countdown to the next clock change above.
About Daylight Saving Time 2028
Daylight Saving Time in 2028 follows the federal rule established by the Energy Policy Act of 2005: clocks spring forward at 2:00 AM on the second Sunday in March and fall back at 2:00 AM on the first Sunday in November. In 2028, that means clocks shift forward on March 12, 2028 and fall back on November 5, 2028.
Benefits
- ·Shows the exact spring-forward and fall-back dates for 2028
- ·Distinguishes states that observe DST from those that don't (Hawaii, most of Arizona)
- ·Pairs with the world-clock for international meetings
- ·Counts down to the next time change
- ·Identifies the safe-T window when clocks repeat or skip
How it works
The 2005 Energy Policy Act extended DST by ~4 weeks compared to the previous rule. Clocks jump from 1:59:59 to 3:00:00 in March (losing an hour) and from 1:59:59 to 1:00:00 in November (gaining an hour). The November transition creates a 1:00-2:00 AM ambiguity that affects log files, schedules, and overnight workers.
Permanent-DST and permanent-standard-time bills have been proposed in Congress repeatedly (the Sunshine Protection Act passed the Senate in 2022 but stalled in the House). Until federal law changes, the bi-annual switch continues.
Who uses Daylight Saving Time 2028
Schedulers across timezones, parents managing kids' sleep schedules through transitions, system administrators handling log timestamps, and anyone with chronic sleep sensitivity.
About Daylight Saving Time
Daylight Saving Time 2028 starts on Sunday, March 12 and ends on Sunday, November 5. Clocks spring forward 1 hour in March and fall back 1 hour in November.
Related
Frequently asked questions
When does Daylight Saving Time start and end in 2028?
Clocks spring forward at 2:00 AM on the second Sunday in March (losing an hour) and fall back at 2:00 AM on the first Sunday in November (gaining an hour). This rule has been federal law since the Energy Policy Act of 2005.
Why do we still observe Daylight Saving Time?
DST was originally adopted during World War I to save coal and standardized federally in the US under the Uniform Time Act of 1966. The Sunshine Protection Act, which would make DST permanent, passed the US Senate in 2022 but stalled in the House. Until federal law changes, the bi-annual switch continues. Energy savings from modern DST are small or negative; the main argument now is consumer preference for evening daylight.
Does the DST change affect sleep?
Yes — most people experience 3-5 days of mild sleep disruption after each transition, especially the spring-forward shift. Studies (Janszky & Ljung, 2008) link the spring shift to a small increase in heart-attack rates the following Monday. Mitigation: shift bedtime by 15 minutes per day for 4 days before the change, and get morning sunlight to reset your circadian rhythm.
Will DST be eliminated soon?
Possibly. The Sunshine Protection Act has been reintroduced multiple times in Congress. As of 2028, the bi-annual change remains federal law. States cannot unilaterally adopt permanent DST without Congressional approval.