Daylight Savings Time Changes in Russia 🇷🇺 (1982)
| Country: | Russia |
| Capital: | Moscow |
| Abbreviations: | RU, RUS |
| IANA Time Zones: | 28 |
| Dial Code: | +7 |
Daylight Savings Time Schedule and Information
Before
23
:
59
After
23
:
00
30 SEP
30 Sep 1982 - Daylight Saving Time Ends
When local standard time is about to reach Thursday, 30 September 1982, 23:59 clocks are turned backward 1 hour to
Thursday, 30 September 1982, 23:00 local standard time instead.
Sunrise and sunset will be about 1 hour earlier on 30 Sep 1982 than the day before. There will be more light in the morning.
Also called Fall Back.
Daylight Savings Time Schedules by Federal Subjects in Russia (1982)
| Federal Subject | DST Start (Spring) | DST End (Fall) |
|---|---|---|
| Adygeya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Altai | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Altai Krai | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Amur Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Arkhangelskaya | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Astrakhan Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Bashkortostan Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Belgorod Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Bryansk Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Buryatiya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Chechnya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Chelyabinsk | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Chukotka | - | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Chuvashiya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Dagestan Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Ingushetiya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Irkutsk Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Ivanovo Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kabardino-Balkariya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kaliningrad Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kalmykiya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kaluga Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kamchatka | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Karachayevo-Cherkesiya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Karelia | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Khabarovsk | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Khakasiya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Khanty-Mansia | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kirov Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Komi | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kostroma Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Krasnodar Krai | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Krasnoyarsk Krai | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kurgan Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kursk Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Kuzbass | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Leningradskaya Oblast' | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Lipetsk Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Magadan Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Mariy-El Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Mordoviya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Moscow | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Moscow Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Murmansk | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Nenets | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Nizhny Novgorod Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Novgorod Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Novosibirsk Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Omsk Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Orenburg Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Oryol oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Penza Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Perm Krai | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Primorye | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Pskov Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Republic of North Ossetia–Alania | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Rostov | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Ryazan Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Sakha | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Sakhalin Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Samara Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Saratov Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Smolensk Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| St.-Petersburg | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Stavropol Kray | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Sverdlovsk Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Tambov Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Tatarstan Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Tomsk Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Tula Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Tver Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Tyumen Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Tyva Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Udmurtiya Republic | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Ulyanovsk | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Vladimir Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Volgograd Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Vologda Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Voronezh Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Yamalo-Nenets | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Yaroslavl Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Yevrey (Jewish) Autonomous Oblast | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
| Zabaykalskiy (Transbaikal) Kray | 31 Mar 1982 | 30 Sep 1982 |
DST Changes Summary for Russia
| Date | Year | Change | Time | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31 Oct | 2010 | Back 1 hour | 02:59 ➜ 02:00 | Daylight Saving End |
| 27 Mar | 2011 | Forward 1 hour | 01:59 ➜ 03:00 | Daylight Saving Start |
Read More About Daylight Savings Time
Common Questions about Daylight Savings Time Changes in Russia
Does Russia use Daylight Saving Time in 1982?
Yes, Russia observes Daylight Saving Time during the 1982 calendar year. The country follows the practice of shifting clocks to better align waking hours with the available evening sunlight during the spring and summer months.
When do the clocks change next in Russia?
The next scheduled time transition in Russia will take place on Thursday, 30 September 1982. At 23:59 local time, clocks will be turned backward by 1 hour. This specific change marks the transition to daylight saving time ends.
Does all of Russia follow the same time change schedule?
Yes, the calendar dates for starting and ending Daylight Saving Time are consistent across the country. However, because Russia spans 28 different time zones, the actual moment the clocks move occurs at different times depending on the local timezone of each federal subject.
How will the next transition affect the day in Russia?
Following the shift on 30 Sep 1982, you will notice that there is more light in the morning compared to the day before. While the transition may temporarily disrupt sleep patterns, the primary goal of this backward shift is to maximize usable daylight for the population.