Daylight saving time has arrived — and for those of us who hate losing sleep, the countdown to it ending has begun.
Daylight saving time moved clocks forward this weekend. Here's why the U.S. still observes it.
A bill recently introduced in Congress proposes half-daylight saving time, permanently setting clocks 30 minutes forward from standard time.
Many will lose an hour of sleep on Sunday, March 8, with the start of 2026 Daylight Saving Time. What to know.
The nights are coming earlier and getting colder — signs that the clocks are about to fall back an hour for the time change. Here's when and what to know about this year's end of daylight saving time ...
It's almost time to turn clocks back again, but this year, there could be changes coming to the annual time change.
Daylight saving time arrives at 2 a.m. March 8. This is the time change when we lose an hour of sleep. Why are we still ...
Every year in (most of) the U.S., we move our clocks ahead one hour in the spring and one hour back in the fall. That time in between is called daylight saving time. (That’s right, drop that “s.”) As ...
Daylight saving time will begin Sunday, March 8, at 2 a.m local time in the U.S. The clocks "spring forward" by one hour, ...
Correction & clarification: A prior version of this story misstated the origin of the U.S. law on daylight saving time. Sunsets are earlier, the nights getting longer and the leaves are turning — ...
Daylight savings 2026 begins this weekend. Will you lose or gain an hour of sleep? Here's when to set clocks ahead for the spring forward time change ...