Spring forward, fall back. Gain an hour, lose an hour. Daylight saving time. Daylight savings. No matter how you refer to it, daylight saving time is coming to an end − for 2024. Despite efforts to ...
Clocks fall back this weekend. Daylight saving time is almost over. The annual change adds more hours of daylight to our usable time in most states. The shift back to standard time is about maximizing ...
Temperatures are dropping, the nights are getting longer and Ohio fall colors are slowly emerging. And not long after Halloween 2025, we'll be changing clocks for the end of daylight saving time, ...
The good news: You will get a glorious extra hour of sleep. The bad: It'll be dark as a pocket by late afternoon for the next few months in the U.S. Daylight saving time ends at 2 a.m. local time ...
Everyone's favorite part of Daylight Savings Time has returned with that precious extra hour of sleep, earlier sunset times, and reminders of caring for your mental health during those ...
Amid the return of seasonal menus and cooling temperatures, the next major indicator of the approaching winter is the end of daylight saving time. In the early hours of Nov. 2, time will fall back one ...
With fall underway and nights now longer than days, sunsets are already creeping earlier—and in just a few weeks, clocks will “fall back” for daylight saving time (DST). The twice-yearly clock change ...
As many in the Chicago area felt their first blast of cold weather this week, it will start to feel much more like the seasons ahead as daylight saving time officially comes to an end overnight. The ...
Daylight saving time will end for 2025 in the first week of November, when clocks will "fall back" one hour. Congress has not yet passed legislation to make daylight saving time permanent, despite ...
Many countries around the world, and most of the United States, still observe the practice of daylight saving time. Though some argue the practice should be brought to an end. The yearly occurrence ...
This Sunday, all our clocks are going to “fall back,” which is to say, we get one extra hour of sleep. This is generally regarded as good news. I, by contrast, do not think this is good news. Because ...