Overview
- The European Council last touched the file briefly in early 2025, and its spokesperson says the current system will probably continue.
- Ending the practice would require a qualified majority of member states, which has not formed.
- The European Commission proposed abolishing the clock changes in 2018 and Parliament backed the plan in 2019, leaving the choice to national governments in the Council.
- Geographic trade-offs complicate consensus, with western cities facing very late winter sunrises under permanent summer time and northern capitals losing bright evenings under permanent winter time.
- The next change is scheduled for Sunday, 26 October 2025, when clocks are set back one hour from 3:00 to 2:00.