News

The UK will switch to British Summer Time at 1am on Sunday, meaning people will effectively lose an hour’s sleep and Mother’s Day arrives an hour earlier. The change – also known as daylight ...
It’s high time we did away with it and retained British summer time throughout the course of the year. This is an issue of disability rights. No, don’t switch off, because this is one of those ...
British Summer Time officially begins this weekend, as the clocks go forward on Sunday morning. This marks the end of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), which means the evenings will be lighter from next ...
This is what it all means for the UK. The clocks will once more go forward for the start of British Summer Time on Sunday, March 30, 2025. The clock will jump from 1am to 2am, which might be a ...
An alternative variation to this reform is one where the UK would simply remain on British Summer Time throughout the year. The UK previously experimented with such an approach between 1968 and 1971.
The clocks changed at 1am on Sunday morning, marking the start of British Summer Time and the end to the bleak winter months. With the change comes longer days as the sun will begin to set later ...
The clocks go forward on Sunday, meaning the evenings will be getting much lighter - even if it does mean losing an hour in bed. But this hasn't always been the case. Although the idea of daylight ...
The shift happens at 1am on the last Sunday of March, this year landing on Sunday, March 30, and heralds the commencement of British Summer Time (BST). For those marking their calendars ...
Also known as British Summer Time (BST), this changing of the clocks - moving them on one hour from Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) - began in the UK in 1916 during the First World War. It was adopted ...
Summer time in London is a wonderful thing and the British Summer Time music festival at Hyde Park - a series of open air concerts, right in the city centre - is top of our 'to do' list.