Home   News   Time Zone News   New official time rules in Moldova

Moldova Updates Time Rules to Match European Standards

The change moves away from an old Soviet regulation and aligns Moldova more closely with EU timekeeping standards.

The Moldovan Parliament building with the national emblem.
Moldova is introducing more explicit rules for official time, aligned with European standards. Pictured: the Parliament building in Chișinău.
©iStock.com/Denny van der Vaart

Replacing Soviet-Era Regulation

The Republic of Moldova is replacing a Soviet-era regulation governing official time.

The new framework clarifies the rules for standard time and Daylight Saving Time, aligns them with European standards, and updates the time at which the seasonal transition occurs.

Essentially, we are talking about a technical measure, but one with a direct impact on the proper functioning of the economy and on our integration into the European Union’s single market.

Cristina Ceban, State Secretary of the Ministry of Economic Development and Digitalization

moldpres.md

The change was approved on February 25, 2026, in a decision adopted by the Moldovan government. The decision will enter into force once it is published in the Official Journal of the Republic of Moldova.

DST on Same Dates, but Different Times

Moldova already changes clocks on the same dates as the EU (the last Sunday in March and October).

What changes now is the clock time of the transition. The time change will now take place one hour later in the night than before:

  • DST starts at 03:00 (3 am) local time, instead of 02:00. Clocks are set ahead 1 hour to 04:00 (4 am).
  • DST ends at 04:00 (4 am) local time, instead of 03:00. Clocks are set back 1 hour to 03:00 (3 am).

UTC offsets remain unchanged.

Time change in Moldova 2026

Daylight Saving Time in Europe

European countries coordinate their time changes. Under current EU law, DST starts on the last Sunday of March and ends on the last Sunday of October.

Countries that follow DST include:

Countries that do not have DST include Russia, Iceland, and Belarus.

Two clocks next to each other, one representing spring DST and the other representing fall DST. The one-hour range marked on the clocks symbolises the DST change.
DST Guide 2026

Published: