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Which Country Has the Most Time Zones? (It's Not Russia)

📅 2026-06-25  ·  ⏱ 4 min read  ·  🏷 Facts & Trivia

Russia is the largest country by land area, spanning 11 time zones. That sounds like the record. But France beats it — with 12 time zones.

Why France?

France's overseas territories are scattered across the globe. From the Caribbean to the Indian Ocean to the South Pacific, these territories carry French time zones with them.

Here's the breakdown:

CountryTime ZonesWhy
France12Metropolitan France + overseas territories (Réunion, Guadeloupe, Martinique, French Guiana, New Caledonia, French Polynesia, etc.)
Russia11Largest contiguous landmass, stretching from Kaliningrad to Kamchatka
United States950 states + territories (Guam, Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands, American Samoa)
United Kingdom8Great Britain + overseas territories (Falklands, Gibraltar, Bermuda, etc.)
Australia8Mainland states + external territories (Norfolk Island, Christmas Island, Cocos Islands)
Canada6From Newfoundland (UTC-3:30) to British Columbia (UTC-7)
Denmark5Denmark proper + Greenland (4 zones) + Faroe Islands
New Zealand3Mainland + Chatham Islands (+45 min) + Cook Islands
Brazil4From Fernando de Noronha (UTC-2) to Acre (UTC-5)

Does This Matter in Practice?

For most people, no. If you're in Paris, you only care about one time zone. But for governments, airlines, and international companies, these scattered zones create real complexity.

France has to coordinate meetings across territories that span 12 hours. A 9 AM meeting in Paris is 8 PM in Tahiti and 4 AM in Guadeloupe. Nobody wins.

The Runner-Up: Russia

Russia's 11 time zones are all contiguous — they cover one continuous landmass. When it's 9 AM in Kaliningrad (western Russia), it's 8 PM in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky (eastern Russia).

Russia has experimented with reducing the number of zones. In 2010, they cut from 11 to 9. In 2014, they restored two. In 2016, more regions were shifted. The constant changes make it hard for residents to keep track.

What About China?

China spans five geographical time zones but uses only one: Beijing Time (UTC+8). This means in western Xinjiang, the sun can rise at 10:00 AM in winter. Locals unofficially use "Xinjiang Time" (UTC+6) for daily life, but all official schedules follow Beijing.

It's a political decision — one time zone for national unity — but it creates a weird daily reality for millions of people.

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