

A 2021 poll by YouGov and The Economist found 63 percent support for a single setting.Īll three polls show the public favoring daylight saving time over standard time. A YouGov poll that month found 64 percent of those surveyed favoring a year-round setting. In recent years, however, two trends have emerged: People are tired of changing their clocks, and most Americans prefer daylight saving time.Ī Monmouth University poll in March found that 61 percent of respondents favored abandoning the time change. Public opinion on the competing schedules has waffled over the decades. “And we really need light in the morning to wake us up, to get us going, to reset our whole internal clock with what goes on in the world around us.” “What standard time does is, it optimizes our light in the morning,” said Beth Malow, a professor of neurology and pediatrics at Vanderbilt University. Most sleep experts prefer it to daylight saving time for reasons of health.

Scientists view standard time as the natural setting for the planet and the human body. The nation will bid goodbye to daylight saving time on Sunday, at least for now. Currently, most of the United States operates on daylight saving time between March and November and on standard time for the rest of the year. Daylight saving time shifts the clock forward, moving sunset one hour later. In standard time, noon arrives when the sun hangs highest in the sky.
