Lawmakers have reintroduced a bipartisan bill to make daylight saving time, which typically runs from the second Sunday in March through the first Sunday in November, continue year-round in New York. Arizona and Hawaii and the U.S.'s five inhabited territories do not observe the practice.
Seasonally, summer-like conditions prevail from June to early September statewide, while areas in far southern New York and New York City have summer conditions from late May through early-mid October.
One way to remember the difference between EST and EDT is to remember that the D in EDT stands for Daylight. The season with the most daylight is summer, when the sun rises early and sets late. Therefore, EDT is the time zone used in summer and spring, while EST is the time zone used in winter and autumn.
Light grey lines show when the clocks change for daylight saving. Red line shows today. Today has 16.2 hours of daylight.
The clock on 60 East 14th Street is a public art, science and grassroots organizing project initially launched in New York in September 2020. The Climate Clock has two labels. “Deadline” indicates the decreasing time window as the planet approaches 1.5 °C of global heating due to carbon emissions.
In the UK the clocks go forward 1 hour at 1am on the last Sunday in March, and back 1 hour at 2am on the last Sunday in October. The period when the clocks are 1 hour ahead is called British Summer Time (BST). There's more daylight in the evenings and less in the mornings (sometimes called Daylight Saving Time).
Eastern Daylight Time is 1 hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time.
Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) is a North American time zone in use from the second Sunday in March to the first Sunday in November during Daylight Saving Time (DST). Eastern Standard Time (EST) is used during the remainder of the year.
Eastern Time is simply used to tell the local time in areas that observe both Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) and Eastern Standard Time (EST).
Sydney is 14 hours ahead of New York.
India is 9 hours and 30 minutes ahead of New York. Press any time in the table below to open and share the event time page.
Australian Eastern Standard Time is 15 hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time. Convert more time zones by visiting the time zone page and clicking on common time zone conversions.
It is also referred to as the "latest time zone" on Earth, as clocks in it always show the 'latest' (i.e., most advanced) time of all time zones. UTC+14:00 stretches as far as 30° east of the 180° longitude line and creates a large fold in the International Date Line around the Pacific nation of Kiribati.
The nation of Samoa also observed the same time as the Samoa Time Zone until it moved across the International Date Line at the end of 29 December 2011; it is now 24 hours (25 hours in southern hemisphere summer) ahead of American Samoa.
California is 3 hours behind New York.
The daylight saving time that matches EST is "Eastern Daylight Time" (EDT). Canada, the United States and also some Caribbean islands set their clocks forward by one hour to this daylight saving time in the summer and back again in the fall.