
Share
22nd January 2026
11:35am GMT
This winter has felt like a long one and you are probably looking forward to the extra daylight hours already.
The clocks will “spring forward” as we head towards summer, and in just a matter of weeks the evenings will get longer.
On Sunday, March 29, clocks across Ireland will move forward by one hour at 1am.
This means that the official start of Daylight Savings Time comes a day earlier this year than in 2025.
The clocks will then return to standard time on the last Sunday in October.
Certain parts of Ireland will experience sunsets beyond 8pm, including County Fermanagh in Northern Ireland, immediately after the clock change.
The clocks have gone forward every year in Ireland from 1916.
The original idea of maximising daylight hours was initially proposed by American inventor Benjamin Franklin in 1784 and subsequently examined in a pamphlet called “The Waste of Daylight” by British writer William Willett in 1907.
Germany was the first country to introduce daylight saving time in 1916, a year after Willett’s death, and the UK followed swiftly, along with many other nations involved in the First World War.
Explore more on these topics: