It depends on where you live.
* 15 Jan @ 3 AM TOST in Tonga
* 15 Jan @ 3 AM FJST in Fiji
* 18-19 Feb @ midnight local DST in Brazil
* 25-26 Mar @ midnight PYST in Paraguay
* 2 Apr @ 4 AM WSDT in Samoa
* 2 Apr @ 3 AM NZDT in New Zealand including the Chatham Islands & the Amundsen-Scott & McMurdo Stations in Antarctica
* 2 Apr @ 2 AM LHDT on Lord Howe Island
* 2 Apr @ 3 AM local DST in mainland Australia & Tasmania
* 2 Apr @ 2 AM WAST in Namibia
* 13-14 May @ midnight CLST in mainland Chile & on Easter Island
* 27 May @ 3 AM WEST in Morocco & Western Sahara
* 21-22 Sep @ midnight IRDT in Iran
* 27 Oct @ 1 AM EEST in Jordan
* 27 Oct @ 4 AM EEST in Syria
* 28 Oct @ 2 AM EEST in the Palestinian Territories
* 28-29 Oct @ midnight EEST in Lebanon
* 29 Oct @ 2 AM ILDT in Israel
* 29 Oct @ 1 AM UTC in Europe, the Azores, the Canary Islands, most of Greenland, the Madeira Islands, Svalbard & Jan Mayen, and the Tor & Troll Antarctic Research Stations
* 29 Oct @ 3 AM WEST in Morocco & Western Sahara
* 29 Oct @ 2 AM local DST in most of Mexico
* 5 Nov @ 1 AM CUDT in Cuba
* 5 Nov @ 2 AM local DST in the Bahamas, Bermuda, Canada, part of Greenland, Haiti, 10 Mexican cities on or near the U.S. border, St.-Pierre-et-Miquelon, and the United States
* 7 Nov @ 2 AM CET at the Troll Antarctic Research Station
Clocks are set back one hour when Daylight Savings Time ends, typically in the fall. When the time changes from Daylight Saving Time to Standard Time, people usually "fall back" and set their clocks back one hour.
It's because of daylight savings time. Each time, because it usually gets darker in the afternoon, people would have to set their clocks back, so that the working environment to the country can continue and be more precised.
In Indiana, clocks are set back one hour for Daylight Saving Time on the first Sunday in November. This is in line with the majority of the United States.
Clocks are typically set back one hour at 2:00 am local time on the first Sunday in November for countries observing daylight saving time. This practice is to mark the end of daylight saving time in the fall.
You'll set the clock back. Many people use the mnemonic "spring forward, fall back" to remember :)
Nov 6 2011
Clocks are set back one hour when Daylight Savings Time ends, typically in the fall. When the time changes from Daylight Saving Time to Standard Time, people usually "fall back" and set their clocks back one hour.
It's because of daylight savings time. Each time, because it usually gets darker in the afternoon, people would have to set their clocks back, so that the working environment to the country can continue and be more precised.
Daylight Saving Time ends on the first Sunday in November, when the clocks are set back one hour.
Clocks were turned forward at 2:00 am on March 12, 2017.
In Indiana, clocks are set back one hour for Daylight Saving Time on the first Sunday in November. This is in line with the majority of the United States.
Clocks are typically set back one hour at 2:00 am local time on the first Sunday in November for countries observing daylight saving time. This practice is to mark the end of daylight saving time in the fall.
You'll set the clock back. Many people use the mnemonic "spring forward, fall back" to remember :)
Daylight saving time saves light. You turn your clocks an hour ahead in spring and set them an hour back in fall.
Daylight Saving Time is the name of the plan to set clocks ahead in spring and back in fall.
On Sunday, November 7, 2010 at 2 a.m., Daylight Saving Time ends . What time is best is up to your discretion .
Yes, Paris observes daylight saving time, where clocks are set forward by one hour in the spring and set back by one hour in the fall.