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Getting Ready for Daylight Saving Time 2026

📅 July 10, 2026  ·  ⏱ 6 min read  ·  🏷 Time Zones, Guides, Productivity

Twice a year, a chunk of the world rewrites its own clock, and for a week or two nothing lines up the way it did. The 2026 transitions are no different. A little prep removes most of the friction.

The 2026 Dates

In the United States and Canada, clocks move forward one hour on the second Sunday in March (March 8, 2026) and back one hour on the first Sunday in November (November 1, 2026). The European Union shifts on the last Sunday in March (March 29, 2026) and the last Sunday in October (October 25, 2026).

The gap between those two regions means there is a window of about three weeks in spring and one week in autumn when the US-EU offset is off by an hour from its summer norm. Mark those weeks; they are where meetings go wrong.

Who Does Not Move

Large parts of the world ignore summer time entirely:

If your counterpart is in one of these places, their offset from you is stable all year. The confusion only appears on the side that switches.

Why the "Lost" and "Gained" Hour Bites

When clocks spring forward, the 02:00-03:00 hour does not exist. Any recurring event booked in that window behaves unpredictably across calendar tools. When clocks fall back, that hour happens twice, which can double-notify or double-book. For the transition weekend, avoid scheduling anything on the nose of 01:30-02:30 local.

Practical Prep Checklist

Use a Tool for the Awkward Weeks

The few weeks around each transition are when offsets are least intuitive. Rather than trust memory, check the live offset for the exact date with our time difference calculator, or watch the countdown on our DST countdown page so you are never surprised by the shift.