Oct 31, 2010, 3:00 am
In some areas of Russia
Note: Only some parts of Russia used DST in 1921.
Feb 14
Forward 1 hour
Feb 14, 1921 - Daylight Saving Time Started
When local standard time was about to reach
Monday, February 14, 1921, 11:00:00 pm clocks were turned forward 1 hour to
Tuesday, February 15, 1921, 12:00:00 midnight local daylight time instead.
Sunrise and sunset were about 1 hour later on Feb 15, 1921 than the day before. There was more light in the evening and less light in the morning.
Also called Spring Forward, Summer Time, and Daylight Savings Time.
Mar 20
Forward 1 hour
Mar 20, 1921 - Daylight Saving Time Increased
Double DST – Clocks were turned ahead another hour when DST was already in force (2 hours ahead of standard time).
When local daylight time was about to reach
Sunday, March 20, 1921, 11:00:00 pm clocks were turned forward 1 hour to
Monday, March 21, 1921, 12:00:00 midnight local daylight time instead.
Sunrise and sunset were about 1 hour later on Mar 21, 1921 than the day before. There was more light in the evening and less light in the morning.
Also called Spring Forward, Summer Time, and Daylight Savings Time.
Sep 1
Back 1 hour
Sep 1, 1921 - Daylight Saving Time Decreased
Double DST ended – Clocks were turned back from double DST (2 hours ahead of standard time) to DST (1 hour ahead of standard time).
When local daylight time was about to reach
Thursday, September 1, 1921, 12:00:00 midnight clocks were turned backward 1 hour to
Wednesday, August 31, 1921, 11:00:00 pm local daylight time instead.
Sunrise and sunset were about 1 hour earlier on Sep 1, 1921 than the day before. There was more light in the morning and less light in the evening.
Also called Spring Forward, Summer Time, and Daylight Savings Time.
Oct 1
Back 1 hour
Oct 1, 1921 - Daylight Saving Time Ended
When local daylight time was about to reach
Saturday, October 1, 1921, 12:00:00 midnight clocks were turned backward 1 hour to
Friday, September 30, 1921, 11:00:00 pm local standard time instead.
Sunrise and sunset were about 1 hour earlier on Oct 1, 1921 than the day before. There was more light in the morning and less light in the evening.
Also called Fall Back and Winter Time.
When Does DST Start and End in Russia?
Despite having used Daylight Saving Time (DST) for many years and as recently as 2010, Russia currently does not have DST.
DST First Introduced in 1917
The Soviet Union first experimented with DST in 1917, when clocks were turned forward by 1 hour. The measure was repealed only months later and, although the country's time zones underwent a number of changes in the years that followed, there was no official DST clock change from 1918 to 1980.
The USSR reintroduced DST in 1981. From 1984, the country changed its clocks simultaneously with most European countries. 2011 saw the nationwide introduction of year-round DST, ending a period of annual clock changes that had lasted for 3 decades. Following another law change in 2014, Russian clocks were turned back by 1 hour to today's all-year standard time.
Which Oblasts, Republics, Krais, Autonomous Okrugs, Federal Cities and Autonomous Oblasts use Daylight Saving Time in 1921
DST in Locations in Russia in 1921 (133 Locations) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abakan | No DST | Krasnodar | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Samara | No DST |
Amderma | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Krasnoyarsk | No DST | Saransk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Anadyr | No DST | Kyzyl | No DST | Saratov | No DST |
Anapa | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Lipetsk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Saskylakh | No DST |
Arkhangelsk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Magadan | No DST | Severo-Kurilsk | No DST |
Astrakhan | No DST | Magnitogorsk | No DST | Smolensk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Barnaul | No DST | Makhachkala | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Sochi | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Belaya Gora | No DST | Mezen | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Srednekolymsk | No DST |
Belgorod | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Mineralnye Vody | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Stavropol | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Belushya Guba | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Moscow | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Surgut | No DST |
Bilibino | No DST | Murmansk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Syktyvkar | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Birobidzhan | No DST | Mys Shmidta | No DST | Teriberka | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Blagoveshchensk | No DST | Naberezhnye Chelny | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Tiksi | No DST |
Bratsk | No DST | Nadym | No DST | Tolyatti | No DST |
Bryansk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Nakhodka | No DST | Tomsk | No DST |
Cheboksary | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Naryan-Mar | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Tula | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Chelyabinsk | No DST | Neryungri | No DST | Tura | No DST |
Cherepovets | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Nizhnevartovsk | No DST | Tyumen | No DST |
Chersky | No DST | Nizhny Novgorod | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Udachny | No DST |
Chita | No DST | Norilsk | No DST | Ufa | No DST |
Chokurdakh | No DST | Novgorod | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Ukhta | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Deputatsky | No DST | Novokuznetsk | No DST | Ulan-Ude | No DST |
Dikson | No DST | Novorossiysk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Ulyanovsk | No DST |
Dolgoprudny | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Novosibirsk | No DST | Ussuriysk | No DST |
Dudinka | No DST | Novy Urengoy | No DST | Ust-Kamchatsk | No DST |
Elista | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Noyabrsk | No DST | Ust-Nera | No DST |
Evensk | No DST | Okha | No DST | Velsk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Gelendzhik | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Olenyok | No DST | Verkhoyansk | No DST |
Gorno-Altaysk | No DST | Omsk | No DST | Vilyuysk | No DST |
Grozny | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Orenburg | No DST | Vladimir | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Igarka | No DST | Oymyakon | No DST | Vladivostok | No DST |
Irkutsk | No DST | Pechora | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Volgograd | No DST |
Izhevsk | No DST | Penza | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Volochanka | No DST |
Kaliningrad | No DST | Perm | No DST | Vorkuta | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Kaluga | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky | No DST | Voronezh | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Kazan | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Petrozavodsk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Yakutsk | No DST |
Kemerovo | No DST | Pevek | No DST | Yaroslavl | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Khabarovsk | No DST | Polyarnye Zori | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Yekaterinburg | No DST |
Khandyga | No DST | Pskov | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Yoshkar-Ola | Feb 14 – Oct 1 |
Khanty-Mansiysk | No DST | Pyatigorsk | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk | No DST |
Khatanga | No DST | Rostov | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Zabaykalsk | No DST |
Kirov | No DST | Rostov-on-Don | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Zhigansk | No DST |
Komsomolsk-on-Amur | No DST | Ryazan | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Zyryanka | No DST |
Kostroma | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Saint-Petersburg | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | ||
Kovrov | Feb 14 – Oct 1 | Salekhard | No DST |
Daylight Saving Time History in Russia
- Russia last observed Daylight Saving Time in 2010.
- Russia has observed DST for 41 years between 1916 and 2010 (DST in at least one location).
- See Worldwide DST Statistics