TIME ZONES 10 min read

Why Does Daylight Saving Time Exist?

Every spring, hundreds of millions of people lose an hour of sleep when clocks spring forward. Every autumn, they get it back. But why? The answer is a fascinating story of wartime energy conservation, lobbying battles, and a persistent human desire to control time.

📅 Updated May 2026 · ✍️ GlobeTimeZone Editorial

The Original Problem: Wasted Daylight

Before artificial lighting became widespread, the amount of usable daylight in a day had enormous economic consequences. Farmers, factory workers, and merchants all operated on daylight. In summer, the sun rises earlier than people typically wake up, meaning precious early-morning light goes unused while everyone is still asleep — only to have that light "wasted" before people get started.

The core idea behind DST is simple: by moving clocks forward by one hour in spring, you shift that "extra" early-morning daylight to the evening, when people are actually awake and active.

🕯️ Key insight: DST doesn't create more daylight — it just shifts when people experience it. The goal is to align waking hours with daylight hours during summer months.

A Brief History of Daylight Saving Time

1784

Benjamin Franklin (humorously) suggested Parisians could save candles by rising earlier in his satirical essay "An Economical Project." This is often cited as the first known proposal, though Franklin never seriously advocated for clock changes.

1895

New Zealand entomologist George Vernon Hudson formally proposed a two-hour shift to the Wellington Philosophical Society. His motivation was personal: he wanted more daylight after work to collect insects.

1905–1908

British builder William Willett independently proposed seasonal clock changes in his pamphlet "The Waste of Daylight." He campaigned vigorously but died in 1915 without seeing his idea implemented.

1916

Germany became the first country to officially adopt DST on April 30, 1916, during World War I — primarily to conserve coal for the war effort. Within weeks, Britain and most Allied nations followed.

1918–1945

DST was adopted and abandoned repeatedly across different countries, sometimes multiple times. The US adopted "War Time" during WWII, which was essentially year-round DST.

1966–Present

The US Uniform Time Act of 1966 standardized DST rules across the country. Since then, DST observance has gradually declined globally as more countries recognize the costs outweigh the benefits.

Does DST Actually Save Energy?

The original energy-saving justification for DST has been questioned by modern research. Studies show mixed results:

The Health and Economic Costs of Clock Changes

The twice-yearly clock shift has measurable real-world costs that have become increasingly hard to justify:

Health impacts

Economic impacts

🔬 Research consensus: Most sleep scientists and public health researchers now advocate for permanent standard time — not permanent DST — as being most aligned with natural human circadian rhythms tied to sunrise.

Which Countries Observe DST Today?

As of 2026, about 70 countries — roughly one-third of the world — still observe daylight saving time. Most are in North America and Europe.

Countries WITH Daylight Saving Time

🇺🇸 USA (most states)
🇨🇦 Canada
🇬🇧 United Kingdom
🇩🇪 Germany
🇫🇷 France
🇦🇺 Australia (eastern)
🇳🇿 New Zealand
🇧🇷 Brazil (south)

Countries WITHOUT Daylight Saving Time

🇨🇳 China
🇯🇵 Japan
🇮🇳 India
🇰🇷 South Korea
🇸🇬 Singapore
🇦🇪 UAE
🇷🇺 Russia
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia

Is Daylight Saving Time Being Abolished?

There's growing momentum worldwide to eliminate the biannual clock change:

The Bottom Line

Daylight saving time began as a wartime measure to save energy, and it did serve a genuine purpose in an era of coal-heated homes and candle lighting. Today, the case for DST is much weaker: the energy savings are minimal, the health costs are real, and the twice-yearly disruption creates enormous coordination headaches for a globalized world.

The question isn't really whether to have DST or not — it's whether to stop changing the clocks at all. The world is moving toward permanent time zones, and the debate is simply which one to keep.

🌍 Planning across time zones? Use our Time Zone Converter or Meeting Scheduler to find the best times across DST and non-DST regions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why was daylight saving time invented?

DST was formally adopted by Germany in 1916 during World War I to conserve coal. The idea was to align waking hours with summer daylight, reducing evening lighting needs. Britain and most Allied nations quickly followed.

Which countries do not observe DST?

Most equatorial and Asian countries do not observe DST, including China, Japan, India, South Korea, Singapore, Indonesia, and the UAE. Russia abolished clock changes in 2014.

Is daylight saving time bad for health?

Research suggests the transition itself is harmful — heart attacks, strokes, and workplace injuries all increase in the days following the spring clock change. Most sleep scientists prefer permanent standard time for better alignment with natural circadian rhythms.

When does daylight saving time start and end?

In the US, DST begins on the second Sunday of March (clocks spring forward 1 hour) and ends on the first Sunday of November (clocks fall back). In the EU, clocks change on the last Sunday of March and last Sunday of October.