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Daylight Saving Time is about to end for everyone but Arizona

Arizona doesn't participate in Daylight Saving Time, which means that we won't have to adjust our clocks or worry about our sleep.
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Daylight Saving Time. Alarm clock and orange color leaves on wooden table. Autumn time. Fall time change. Generative AI.

ARIZONA, USA — The rest of the country is winding up to "fall back" as Daylight Saving Time comes to an end. But for Arizona? We're not even worried about it!

Arizona doesn't participate in Daylight Saving Time, which means that we won't have to adjust our clocks or worry about our sleep. However, it also means that we're functionally going to find ourselves in a different time zone.

Here’s what you need to know about "falling back" and how it impacts Arizona.

RELATED: Daylight saving time is coming to an end soon. Here's when clocks 'fall back' in 2024

When is Daylight Saving Time over?

Daylight Saving Time will end at 2 a.m. local time on Nov. 3, the first Sunday in November. Most people will get an extra hour of sleep.

Why doesn't Arizona observe DST?

DST started when “war time” was established in the U.S. in 1918. The concept was supposed to help save fuel during World War I. While the rest of the country agreed, Maricopa County supervisors did not, and in 1919, Phoenix was actually in a different time zone than the rest of the state. 

DST was reinstated again in World War II and then brought back permanently in 1966. Arizona tried it out, but ultimately decided DST wasn’t for desert dwellers — more sunlight in the evening means more air conditioning, more energy used, more misery… we’ll pass. 

If Arizona doesn’t observe DST, why do I need to know about it? 

When DST “springs forward,” Arizona is on the same time as California, Nevada, Washington, most of Oregon and northern Idaho. When clocks “fall back” one hour, we are on the same time as New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, southern Idaho and a portion of eastern Oregon. That's Mountain Standard Time or MST. MST is Arizona’s “permanent time zone.” 

The Navajo Nation in the northeast quarter of the state does observe daylight saving time. The Hopi Nation, fully surrounded by the Navajo reservation, does not.

Do any other states not observe DST?

Hawaii and Arizona are the lone rangers on this one. There are several U.S. territories, such as Guam and Puerto Rico, that do not observe DST, but only two states.

READ MORE: Yes, states can opt out of daylight saving time

I keep hearing about DST no longer being a thing, is that true?

Some states want to stay on daylight saving time for good. But the change has not been made just yet. And even if it did, Arizona would not really be impacted. 

Since the Pacific coast states move to MST during daylight saving time, which is Arizona's permanent time zone, Arizona would always be aligned with those states instead of being an hour ahead of them during the winter months. 

READ MORE: Here's what permanent daylight saving time would mean for Arizona

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