DST timeline
Daylight saving time in Cuba has 3 recorded changes on record, spanning 1928–2009. The earliest documented event is the adoption in 1928: Cuba first introduced daylight saving time in 1928. The most recent is the modification in 2009: Cuba re-established a seasonal DST schedule after returning to standard time in 2006 and observing DST again in 2007-2008. As of the latest data, Cuba is shown as "Observed" in our daylight saving tracker, which is the practical takeaway for anyone scheduling calls, travel, or deliveries against this region today.
Cuba re-established a seasonal DST schedule after returning to standard time in 2006 and observing DST again in 2007-2008.
Each entry records a distinct daylight saving milestone for Cuba. An adoption marks the year clocks first began shifting; an abolition marks the year the country stopped changing them and settled on a single year-round offset; a modification covers changes to the start or end dates, the size of the shift, or which regions take part; and a reform vote records a legislative or parliamentary decision that may not yet be in force. Years reflect when the change took effect, not when it was announced, so a 2019 vote and a later effective date can both appear.
Daylight saving rules change more often than most people expect, and historical offsets are exactly the detail that breaks date math for past timestamps, travel records, and historical scheduling. If you only need today’s behaviour for Cuba, the current-status link above is the fastest answer; if you are reconstructing a past date or comparing several countries, the full timeline and the linked sources below give you the authoritative record.