Timezone details
- Identifier
- Abbreviation
- —
- Transitioned
- April 5, 2026 at 02:00 AM
- Featured city
- Canberra
Australia • Sydney
AustraliaCurrent local time
14:05:10
Sunday, May 31, 2026
UTC offset
UTC+10:00
Status
Standard time
Next transition
October 4, 2026 at 03:00 AM
Sydney toggles between daylight and standard time annually. Clocks spring forward by one hour in 4 months (October 4, 2026 at 03:00 AM).
Standard time since
April 5, 2026 at 02:00 AM
2 months ago
Daylight saving resumes on
October 4, 2026 at 03:00 AM
in 4 months
31% through the current standard time season.
Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST)
Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST) covers six major zones across eastern Australia, including cities like Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane—making it one of the country’s most populated and economically active regions. While most areas shift forward to Australian Eastern Daylight Time (UTC+11) during summer months, some like Brisbane stay on AEST year-round, creating subtle but important differences when coordinating across states.
No—four of the six AEST-member regions observe daylight switching (like Sydney and Melbourne), but Brisbane and others remain on standard time all year, which can affect cross-state scheduling.
Macquarie Island serves as the reference point for the region’s timezone identity in systems that prioritize Antarctic-Australian overlap zones, even though most users associate AEST with mainland cities like Sydney.
Clocks typically fall back from UTC+11 to UTC+10 on a Sunday in early April—marking the end of Australian Easter Time for that year.
Currently, yes—all member zones are UTC+10:00, but from October to April, four of them temporarily shift to UTC+11:00 during daylight saving.
Brisbane and parts of Queensland observe AEST without daylight saving, so their clocks don’t change in summer like Sydney or Hobart do.
Travelers flying between Sydney and Brisbane during DST season may encounter a 1-hour time difference despite both normally being in the AEST zone—a quirk that surprises many first-time visitors.
Australia’s state-based control over daylight saving decisions has led to this patchwork pattern—especially notable in how Queensland opted out while neighboring states adopted summer time.
Proposals have surfaced occasionally in Queensland and elsewhere, but no nationwide consensus exists yet—so for now, the seasonal switch remains part of life for most AEST observers.