Changes to Cyprus timezones










8















Today I've heard end of radio program talking about recent some changes in Cyprus timezones. I did not hear the details, but conlusion was, that for travelers travelling between Cyprus and Northern Cyprus (I know, that this is possible) this can a be a little experience.



Expert talking in that radio program underlined that this recent change to Cyprus timezones came from the fact, that both sides of island want to have their timezones aligned to home countries -- i.e.:



  • the Republic of Cyprus's (ROC) want to have the same timezone as Greece has and

  • the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus's (TRNC) want to have times zone aligned to Turkey.

However, when reading Wikipedia's articles on both countries (links above) I found out, that both of them actually have the same timezone:




  • EET (UTC+2) during winter and


  • EEST (UTC+3) during summer.

What am I missing (from that radio talk or in generally)? Can someone shed any light on this recent timezone change in both sides of Cyprus (if there was any recent change at all)?










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    I don't know the actual time zones observed in either part of Cyprus, but I note that Turkey doesn't observe summer time, so Turkey and Greece have the same offset during Greece's period of summer time. The rest of the year, they will be one hour different.

    – phoog
    Sep 13 '16 at 19:55











  • @phoog What do you mean by "Turkey doesn't observe summer time"? Wiki article on Turkey, cited by me, clearly claims that timezone in Turkey is different during summer.

    – trejder
    Sep 14 '16 at 6:52







  • 2





    @trejder It seems that Wikipedia article is not up-to-date as Turkey just decided to remain on summer time the whole year. That also is the core part of the answer you accepted.

    – neo
    Sep 14 '16 at 7:47







  • 1





    Great, another thing to fix before reunification can happen...

    – AakashM
    Sep 14 '16 at 8:32






  • 1





    @trejder I based that comment on the wikipedia articles concerning time zones in Europe and concerning "further-Eastern European time" which Turkey, having decided to remain at UTC+3, is now on. I did not know until I read ypercubeᵀᴹ's throrough answer that Turkey decided to effect this by remaining on "permanent summer time." (The utility of that description perhaps varies between the eastern and western parts of the country.)

    – phoog
    Sep 14 '16 at 16:13
















8















Today I've heard end of radio program talking about recent some changes in Cyprus timezones. I did not hear the details, but conlusion was, that for travelers travelling between Cyprus and Northern Cyprus (I know, that this is possible) this can a be a little experience.



Expert talking in that radio program underlined that this recent change to Cyprus timezones came from the fact, that both sides of island want to have their timezones aligned to home countries -- i.e.:



  • the Republic of Cyprus's (ROC) want to have the same timezone as Greece has and

  • the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus's (TRNC) want to have times zone aligned to Turkey.

However, when reading Wikipedia's articles on both countries (links above) I found out, that both of them actually have the same timezone:




  • EET (UTC+2) during winter and


  • EEST (UTC+3) during summer.

What am I missing (from that radio talk or in generally)? Can someone shed any light on this recent timezone change in both sides of Cyprus (if there was any recent change at all)?










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    I don't know the actual time zones observed in either part of Cyprus, but I note that Turkey doesn't observe summer time, so Turkey and Greece have the same offset during Greece's period of summer time. The rest of the year, they will be one hour different.

    – phoog
    Sep 13 '16 at 19:55











  • @phoog What do you mean by "Turkey doesn't observe summer time"? Wiki article on Turkey, cited by me, clearly claims that timezone in Turkey is different during summer.

    – trejder
    Sep 14 '16 at 6:52







  • 2





    @trejder It seems that Wikipedia article is not up-to-date as Turkey just decided to remain on summer time the whole year. That also is the core part of the answer you accepted.

    – neo
    Sep 14 '16 at 7:47







  • 1





    Great, another thing to fix before reunification can happen...

    – AakashM
    Sep 14 '16 at 8:32






  • 1





    @trejder I based that comment on the wikipedia articles concerning time zones in Europe and concerning "further-Eastern European time" which Turkey, having decided to remain at UTC+3, is now on. I did not know until I read ypercubeᵀᴹ's throrough answer that Turkey decided to effect this by remaining on "permanent summer time." (The utility of that description perhaps varies between the eastern and western parts of the country.)

    – phoog
    Sep 14 '16 at 16:13














8












8








8








Today I've heard end of radio program talking about recent some changes in Cyprus timezones. I did not hear the details, but conlusion was, that for travelers travelling between Cyprus and Northern Cyprus (I know, that this is possible) this can a be a little experience.



Expert talking in that radio program underlined that this recent change to Cyprus timezones came from the fact, that both sides of island want to have their timezones aligned to home countries -- i.e.:



  • the Republic of Cyprus's (ROC) want to have the same timezone as Greece has and

  • the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus's (TRNC) want to have times zone aligned to Turkey.

However, when reading Wikipedia's articles on both countries (links above) I found out, that both of them actually have the same timezone:




  • EET (UTC+2) during winter and


  • EEST (UTC+3) during summer.

What am I missing (from that radio talk or in generally)? Can someone shed any light on this recent timezone change in both sides of Cyprus (if there was any recent change at all)?










share|improve this question
















Today I've heard end of radio program talking about recent some changes in Cyprus timezones. I did not hear the details, but conlusion was, that for travelers travelling between Cyprus and Northern Cyprus (I know, that this is possible) this can a be a little experience.



Expert talking in that radio program underlined that this recent change to Cyprus timezones came from the fact, that both sides of island want to have their timezones aligned to home countries -- i.e.:



  • the Republic of Cyprus's (ROC) want to have the same timezone as Greece has and

  • the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus's (TRNC) want to have times zone aligned to Turkey.

However, when reading Wikipedia's articles on both countries (links above) I found out, that both of them actually have the same timezone:




  • EET (UTC+2) during winter and


  • EEST (UTC+3) during summer.

What am I missing (from that radio talk or in generally)? Can someone shed any light on this recent timezone change in both sides of Cyprus (if there was any recent change at all)?







timezones cyprus northern-cyprus






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:52









Community

1




1










asked Sep 13 '16 at 19:52









trejdertrejder

1,29411631




1,29411631







  • 2





    I don't know the actual time zones observed in either part of Cyprus, but I note that Turkey doesn't observe summer time, so Turkey and Greece have the same offset during Greece's period of summer time. The rest of the year, they will be one hour different.

    – phoog
    Sep 13 '16 at 19:55











  • @phoog What do you mean by "Turkey doesn't observe summer time"? Wiki article on Turkey, cited by me, clearly claims that timezone in Turkey is different during summer.

    – trejder
    Sep 14 '16 at 6:52







  • 2





    @trejder It seems that Wikipedia article is not up-to-date as Turkey just decided to remain on summer time the whole year. That also is the core part of the answer you accepted.

    – neo
    Sep 14 '16 at 7:47







  • 1





    Great, another thing to fix before reunification can happen...

    – AakashM
    Sep 14 '16 at 8:32






  • 1





    @trejder I based that comment on the wikipedia articles concerning time zones in Europe and concerning "further-Eastern European time" which Turkey, having decided to remain at UTC+3, is now on. I did not know until I read ypercubeᵀᴹ's throrough answer that Turkey decided to effect this by remaining on "permanent summer time." (The utility of that description perhaps varies between the eastern and western parts of the country.)

    – phoog
    Sep 14 '16 at 16:13













  • 2





    I don't know the actual time zones observed in either part of Cyprus, but I note that Turkey doesn't observe summer time, so Turkey and Greece have the same offset during Greece's period of summer time. The rest of the year, they will be one hour different.

    – phoog
    Sep 13 '16 at 19:55











  • @phoog What do you mean by "Turkey doesn't observe summer time"? Wiki article on Turkey, cited by me, clearly claims that timezone in Turkey is different during summer.

    – trejder
    Sep 14 '16 at 6:52







  • 2





    @trejder It seems that Wikipedia article is not up-to-date as Turkey just decided to remain on summer time the whole year. That also is the core part of the answer you accepted.

    – neo
    Sep 14 '16 at 7:47







  • 1





    Great, another thing to fix before reunification can happen...

    – AakashM
    Sep 14 '16 at 8:32






  • 1





    @trejder I based that comment on the wikipedia articles concerning time zones in Europe and concerning "further-Eastern European time" which Turkey, having decided to remain at UTC+3, is now on. I did not know until I read ypercubeᵀᴹ's throrough answer that Turkey decided to effect this by remaining on "permanent summer time." (The utility of that description perhaps varies between the eastern and western parts of the country.)

    – phoog
    Sep 14 '16 at 16:13








2




2





I don't know the actual time zones observed in either part of Cyprus, but I note that Turkey doesn't observe summer time, so Turkey and Greece have the same offset during Greece's period of summer time. The rest of the year, they will be one hour different.

– phoog
Sep 13 '16 at 19:55





I don't know the actual time zones observed in either part of Cyprus, but I note that Turkey doesn't observe summer time, so Turkey and Greece have the same offset during Greece's period of summer time. The rest of the year, they will be one hour different.

– phoog
Sep 13 '16 at 19:55













@phoog What do you mean by "Turkey doesn't observe summer time"? Wiki article on Turkey, cited by me, clearly claims that timezone in Turkey is different during summer.

– trejder
Sep 14 '16 at 6:52






@phoog What do you mean by "Turkey doesn't observe summer time"? Wiki article on Turkey, cited by me, clearly claims that timezone in Turkey is different during summer.

– trejder
Sep 14 '16 at 6:52





2




2





@trejder It seems that Wikipedia article is not up-to-date as Turkey just decided to remain on summer time the whole year. That also is the core part of the answer you accepted.

– neo
Sep 14 '16 at 7:47






@trejder It seems that Wikipedia article is not up-to-date as Turkey just decided to remain on summer time the whole year. That also is the core part of the answer you accepted.

– neo
Sep 14 '16 at 7:47





1




1





Great, another thing to fix before reunification can happen...

– AakashM
Sep 14 '16 at 8:32





Great, another thing to fix before reunification can happen...

– AakashM
Sep 14 '16 at 8:32




1




1





@trejder I based that comment on the wikipedia articles concerning time zones in Europe and concerning "further-Eastern European time" which Turkey, having decided to remain at UTC+3, is now on. I did not know until I read ypercubeᵀᴹ's throrough answer that Turkey decided to effect this by remaining on "permanent summer time." (The utility of that description perhaps varies between the eastern and western parts of the country.)

– phoog
Sep 14 '16 at 16:13






@trejder I based that comment on the wikipedia articles concerning time zones in Europe and concerning "further-Eastern European time" which Turkey, having decided to remain at UTC+3, is now on. I did not know until I read ypercubeᵀᴹ's throrough answer that Turkey decided to effect this by remaining on "permanent summer time." (The utility of that description perhaps varies between the eastern and western parts of the country.)

– phoog
Sep 14 '16 at 16:13











1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















9














Cyprus, Greece and Turkey have all been using the same timezone, EET (Eastern European Timezone), which is UTC+2 (and UTC+3 at "summer", Daylight Saving).



I guess what you have heard is related to the announcement of the Turkish government to stop the daylight saving changes and fix the country's timezone to UTC+3 (the EET's daylight saving timezone).

From www.timetemperature.com/europe/turkey_time_zone:




Daylight Saving End Date



The government of Turkey has announced that the country will remain on daylight saving time year round.



Previously Turkey was scheduled to end Daylight Saving Time on
Sunday October 30, 2016 at 4:00 AM local time.




I'm not sure whether the northern part of Cyprus will follow with a similar decision or not but according to the same site, it will: 2016 Time Zones - Kyrenia



Year Date & Time Abbreviation Time Change Offset After
2010 Sun, 28 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 31 Oct, 04:00 EST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2011 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 30 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2012 Sun, 25 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 28 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2013 Sun, 31 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 27 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2014 Sun, 30 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 26 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2015 Sun, 29 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 25 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2016 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) | Probable date
UTC+3h
Thu, 8 Sep, 00:00 EEST → TRT No offset (DST end, TZ change) | Probable date
UTC+3h
2017 — 2019 No known changes, UTC +3 hours all of the period


And also according to this news post:
Cyprus to have two time zones, north to follow Turkey in refusing to turn clocks back




Cyprus will have two time zones, an hour apart, as of October 31,
after the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’ decided on Thursday to follow
Turkey’s example and not return to daylight-saving time.



Turkey has decided not to turn its clocks back an hour next month when
daylight-saving time comes into effect on October 30.



Later in the day it was reported that the Turkish Cypriot side would
follow the same example which will leave them an hour ahead of their
Greek Cypriot compatriots on the other side of the Green Line going
into October 31.



CNA reported that after a meeting of the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’
on Thursday the north decided to stick with summer time.



Last year Turkey waited a week to fall in line with the rest of the
world for a period of around a week before changing to daylight saving
time, causing frustration both in Turkey and in the north as computers
and smartphones automatically dialled back an hour.



...







share|improve this answer

























  • The Turkish military forces occupying Northern Cyprus announced that will enforce the same time zone changes as Turkey. Therefore crossing the border you will have to adjust your timezone to match Eastern European Time (EET) which is UTC/GMT +2.

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:16






  • 1





    @Mr.AndreasGeo yeah but only half of the year ;)

    – ypercubeᵀᴹ
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:35











  • Yes correct :) !

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 21 '16 at 15:15











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "273"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f78731%2fchanges-to-cyprus-timezones%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









9














Cyprus, Greece and Turkey have all been using the same timezone, EET (Eastern European Timezone), which is UTC+2 (and UTC+3 at "summer", Daylight Saving).



I guess what you have heard is related to the announcement of the Turkish government to stop the daylight saving changes and fix the country's timezone to UTC+3 (the EET's daylight saving timezone).

From www.timetemperature.com/europe/turkey_time_zone:




Daylight Saving End Date



The government of Turkey has announced that the country will remain on daylight saving time year round.



Previously Turkey was scheduled to end Daylight Saving Time on
Sunday October 30, 2016 at 4:00 AM local time.




I'm not sure whether the northern part of Cyprus will follow with a similar decision or not but according to the same site, it will: 2016 Time Zones - Kyrenia



Year Date & Time Abbreviation Time Change Offset After
2010 Sun, 28 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 31 Oct, 04:00 EST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2011 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 30 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2012 Sun, 25 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 28 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2013 Sun, 31 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 27 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2014 Sun, 30 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 26 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2015 Sun, 29 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 25 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2016 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) | Probable date
UTC+3h
Thu, 8 Sep, 00:00 EEST → TRT No offset (DST end, TZ change) | Probable date
UTC+3h
2017 — 2019 No known changes, UTC +3 hours all of the period


And also according to this news post:
Cyprus to have two time zones, north to follow Turkey in refusing to turn clocks back




Cyprus will have two time zones, an hour apart, as of October 31,
after the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’ decided on Thursday to follow
Turkey’s example and not return to daylight-saving time.



Turkey has decided not to turn its clocks back an hour next month when
daylight-saving time comes into effect on October 30.



Later in the day it was reported that the Turkish Cypriot side would
follow the same example which will leave them an hour ahead of their
Greek Cypriot compatriots on the other side of the Green Line going
into October 31.



CNA reported that after a meeting of the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’
on Thursday the north decided to stick with summer time.



Last year Turkey waited a week to fall in line with the rest of the
world for a period of around a week before changing to daylight saving
time, causing frustration both in Turkey and in the north as computers
and smartphones automatically dialled back an hour.



...







share|improve this answer

























  • The Turkish military forces occupying Northern Cyprus announced that will enforce the same time zone changes as Turkey. Therefore crossing the border you will have to adjust your timezone to match Eastern European Time (EET) which is UTC/GMT +2.

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:16






  • 1





    @Mr.AndreasGeo yeah but only half of the year ;)

    – ypercubeᵀᴹ
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:35











  • Yes correct :) !

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 21 '16 at 15:15
















9














Cyprus, Greece and Turkey have all been using the same timezone, EET (Eastern European Timezone), which is UTC+2 (and UTC+3 at "summer", Daylight Saving).



I guess what you have heard is related to the announcement of the Turkish government to stop the daylight saving changes and fix the country's timezone to UTC+3 (the EET's daylight saving timezone).

From www.timetemperature.com/europe/turkey_time_zone:




Daylight Saving End Date



The government of Turkey has announced that the country will remain on daylight saving time year round.



Previously Turkey was scheduled to end Daylight Saving Time on
Sunday October 30, 2016 at 4:00 AM local time.




I'm not sure whether the northern part of Cyprus will follow with a similar decision or not but according to the same site, it will: 2016 Time Zones - Kyrenia



Year Date & Time Abbreviation Time Change Offset After
2010 Sun, 28 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 31 Oct, 04:00 EST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2011 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 30 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2012 Sun, 25 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 28 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2013 Sun, 31 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 27 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2014 Sun, 30 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 26 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2015 Sun, 29 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 25 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2016 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) | Probable date
UTC+3h
Thu, 8 Sep, 00:00 EEST → TRT No offset (DST end, TZ change) | Probable date
UTC+3h
2017 — 2019 No known changes, UTC +3 hours all of the period


And also according to this news post:
Cyprus to have two time zones, north to follow Turkey in refusing to turn clocks back




Cyprus will have two time zones, an hour apart, as of October 31,
after the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’ decided on Thursday to follow
Turkey’s example and not return to daylight-saving time.



Turkey has decided not to turn its clocks back an hour next month when
daylight-saving time comes into effect on October 30.



Later in the day it was reported that the Turkish Cypriot side would
follow the same example which will leave them an hour ahead of their
Greek Cypriot compatriots on the other side of the Green Line going
into October 31.



CNA reported that after a meeting of the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’
on Thursday the north decided to stick with summer time.



Last year Turkey waited a week to fall in line with the rest of the
world for a period of around a week before changing to daylight saving
time, causing frustration both in Turkey and in the north as computers
and smartphones automatically dialled back an hour.



...







share|improve this answer

























  • The Turkish military forces occupying Northern Cyprus announced that will enforce the same time zone changes as Turkey. Therefore crossing the border you will have to adjust your timezone to match Eastern European Time (EET) which is UTC/GMT +2.

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:16






  • 1





    @Mr.AndreasGeo yeah but only half of the year ;)

    – ypercubeᵀᴹ
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:35











  • Yes correct :) !

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 21 '16 at 15:15














9












9








9







Cyprus, Greece and Turkey have all been using the same timezone, EET (Eastern European Timezone), which is UTC+2 (and UTC+3 at "summer", Daylight Saving).



I guess what you have heard is related to the announcement of the Turkish government to stop the daylight saving changes and fix the country's timezone to UTC+3 (the EET's daylight saving timezone).

From www.timetemperature.com/europe/turkey_time_zone:




Daylight Saving End Date



The government of Turkey has announced that the country will remain on daylight saving time year round.



Previously Turkey was scheduled to end Daylight Saving Time on
Sunday October 30, 2016 at 4:00 AM local time.




I'm not sure whether the northern part of Cyprus will follow with a similar decision or not but according to the same site, it will: 2016 Time Zones - Kyrenia



Year Date & Time Abbreviation Time Change Offset After
2010 Sun, 28 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 31 Oct, 04:00 EST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2011 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 30 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2012 Sun, 25 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 28 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2013 Sun, 31 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 27 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2014 Sun, 30 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 26 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2015 Sun, 29 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 25 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2016 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) | Probable date
UTC+3h
Thu, 8 Sep, 00:00 EEST → TRT No offset (DST end, TZ change) | Probable date
UTC+3h
2017 — 2019 No known changes, UTC +3 hours all of the period


And also according to this news post:
Cyprus to have two time zones, north to follow Turkey in refusing to turn clocks back




Cyprus will have two time zones, an hour apart, as of October 31,
after the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’ decided on Thursday to follow
Turkey’s example and not return to daylight-saving time.



Turkey has decided not to turn its clocks back an hour next month when
daylight-saving time comes into effect on October 30.



Later in the day it was reported that the Turkish Cypriot side would
follow the same example which will leave them an hour ahead of their
Greek Cypriot compatriots on the other side of the Green Line going
into October 31.



CNA reported that after a meeting of the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’
on Thursday the north decided to stick with summer time.



Last year Turkey waited a week to fall in line with the rest of the
world for a period of around a week before changing to daylight saving
time, causing frustration both in Turkey and in the north as computers
and smartphones automatically dialled back an hour.



...







share|improve this answer















Cyprus, Greece and Turkey have all been using the same timezone, EET (Eastern European Timezone), which is UTC+2 (and UTC+3 at "summer", Daylight Saving).



I guess what you have heard is related to the announcement of the Turkish government to stop the daylight saving changes and fix the country's timezone to UTC+3 (the EET's daylight saving timezone).

From www.timetemperature.com/europe/turkey_time_zone:




Daylight Saving End Date



The government of Turkey has announced that the country will remain on daylight saving time year round.



Previously Turkey was scheduled to end Daylight Saving Time on
Sunday October 30, 2016 at 4:00 AM local time.




I'm not sure whether the northern part of Cyprus will follow with a similar decision or not but according to the same site, it will: 2016 Time Zones - Kyrenia



Year Date & Time Abbreviation Time Change Offset After
2010 Sun, 28 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 31 Oct, 04:00 EST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2011 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 30 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2012 Sun, 25 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 28 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2013 Sun, 31 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 27 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2014 Sun, 30 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 26 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2015 Sun, 29 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) UTC+3h
Sun, 25 Oct, 04:00 EEST → EET -1 hour (DST end) UTC+2h
2016 Sun, 27 Mar, 03:00 EET → EEST +1 hour (DST start) | Probable date
UTC+3h
Thu, 8 Sep, 00:00 EEST → TRT No offset (DST end, TZ change) | Probable date
UTC+3h
2017 — 2019 No known changes, UTC +3 hours all of the period


And also according to this news post:
Cyprus to have two time zones, north to follow Turkey in refusing to turn clocks back




Cyprus will have two time zones, an hour apart, as of October 31,
after the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’ decided on Thursday to follow
Turkey’s example and not return to daylight-saving time.



Turkey has decided not to turn its clocks back an hour next month when
daylight-saving time comes into effect on October 30.



Later in the day it was reported that the Turkish Cypriot side would
follow the same example which will leave them an hour ahead of their
Greek Cypriot compatriots on the other side of the Green Line going
into October 31.



CNA reported that after a meeting of the Turkish Cypriot ‘parliament’
on Thursday the north decided to stick with summer time.



Last year Turkey waited a week to fall in line with the rest of the
world for a period of around a week before changing to daylight saving
time, causing frustration both in Turkey and in the north as computers
and smartphones automatically dialled back an hour.



...








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Sep 13 '16 at 22:10

























answered Sep 13 '16 at 21:36









ypercubeᵀᴹypercubeᵀᴹ

19819




19819












  • The Turkish military forces occupying Northern Cyprus announced that will enforce the same time zone changes as Turkey. Therefore crossing the border you will have to adjust your timezone to match Eastern European Time (EET) which is UTC/GMT +2.

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:16






  • 1





    @Mr.AndreasGeo yeah but only half of the year ;)

    – ypercubeᵀᴹ
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:35











  • Yes correct :) !

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 21 '16 at 15:15


















  • The Turkish military forces occupying Northern Cyprus announced that will enforce the same time zone changes as Turkey. Therefore crossing the border you will have to adjust your timezone to match Eastern European Time (EET) which is UTC/GMT +2.

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:16






  • 1





    @Mr.AndreasGeo yeah but only half of the year ;)

    – ypercubeᵀᴹ
    Sep 20 '16 at 13:35











  • Yes correct :) !

    – Mr. AndreasGeo
    Sep 21 '16 at 15:15

















The Turkish military forces occupying Northern Cyprus announced that will enforce the same time zone changes as Turkey. Therefore crossing the border you will have to adjust your timezone to match Eastern European Time (EET) which is UTC/GMT +2.

– Mr. AndreasGeo
Sep 20 '16 at 13:16





The Turkish military forces occupying Northern Cyprus announced that will enforce the same time zone changes as Turkey. Therefore crossing the border you will have to adjust your timezone to match Eastern European Time (EET) which is UTC/GMT +2.

– Mr. AndreasGeo
Sep 20 '16 at 13:16




1




1





@Mr.AndreasGeo yeah but only half of the year ;)

– ypercubeᵀᴹ
Sep 20 '16 at 13:35





@Mr.AndreasGeo yeah but only half of the year ;)

– ypercubeᵀᴹ
Sep 20 '16 at 13:35













Yes correct :) !

– Mr. AndreasGeo
Sep 21 '16 at 15:15






Yes correct :) !

– Mr. AndreasGeo
Sep 21 '16 at 15:15


















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f78731%2fchanges-to-cyprus-timezones%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

𛂒𛀶,𛀽𛀑𛂀𛃧𛂓𛀙𛃆𛃑𛃷𛂟𛁡𛀢𛀟𛁤𛂽𛁕𛁪𛂟𛂯,𛁞𛂧𛀴𛁄𛁠𛁼𛂿𛀤 𛂘,𛁺𛂾𛃭𛃭𛃵𛀺,𛂣𛃍𛂖𛃶 𛀸𛃀𛂖𛁶𛁏𛁚 𛂢𛂞 𛁰𛂆𛀔,𛁸𛀽𛁓𛃋𛂇𛃧𛀧𛃣𛂐𛃇,𛂂𛃻𛃲𛁬𛃞𛀧𛃃𛀅 𛂭𛁠𛁡𛃇𛀷𛃓𛁥,𛁙𛁘𛁞𛃸𛁸𛃣𛁜,𛂛,𛃿,𛁯𛂘𛂌𛃛𛁱𛃌𛂈𛂇 𛁊𛃲,𛀕𛃴𛀜 𛀶𛂆𛀶𛃟𛂉𛀣,𛂐𛁞𛁾 𛁷𛂑𛁳𛂯𛀬𛃅,𛃶𛁼

Edmonton

Crossroads (UK TV series)