![mexico time zone map mexico time zone map](https://printablemapaz.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/usa-time-zone-map-with-states-cities-clock-in-and-world-zones-inside-printable-north-america-time-zone-map.jpg)
If asked which country has the most time zones, most probably guess the USA or Russia. Which, for you, might mean confusion if you’re heading into any airports along the border area. The clocks will still wind forward in those 10 places though. Well, the no-more-DST starts in April 2023 when the rest of Mexico just won’t wind their clocks forward. So all of these will still apply DST, which means it will look something like this: The ten municipalities bordering the USA have decided to stay synched with their American neighbors, presumably to avoid confusion with border crossing. Some border towns are not not going to do DST. The problem is… not all of Mexico is going to. Which isn’t the worst thing ever given the confusion (see above) Who should we thank for this confounding thing? Some say the USA’s Benjamin Franklin, some say NZ’s George Hudson, some say the UK’s William Willett, some say “I have no idea who two of those three people are, tell me something useful?!” Back to the Mexico problem Except for the Navajo Nation who opted in. Arizona, USA for example opted out of DST. Then there is the confusion of who does it and who doesn’t.
![mexico time zone map mexico time zone map](https://www.worldatlas.com/webimage/countrys/namerica/mxtimes.gif)
In other words, when daylight saving starts (in the summer which frankly is confusing because there is already more sunlight then so why is it called ‘saving’) then you wind the clock forward an hour, losing one, and you wind it back again in the fall (autumn) meaning you live the same hour twice, to help make better use of the natural daylight. (Just remember: Spring Forward, Fall Back.) Most of us forget/are confused by it/just let our phones do their thing and wake up feeling slightly less/more well rested depending on which way they’re moving. Here is a map (complete with ticking times) showing these. PST (Pacific standard time) GMT-8 (which is just Tijuana).Mexican time is changing! They currently have 4 time zones: