Current Time in Bucharest – EET / EEST Time Zone | TimeTranslator.com
Bucharest · Romania · Eastern Europe

Current Time in Bucharest

Live NTP-synced clock · EET / EEST time zone · Weather, world city comparisons & complete guide

Bucharest Romania — Eastern Europe
UTC
Latitude44.4268° N Longitude26.1025° E Elevation~85 m
🌡️ Current Weather in Bucharest


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UTC Offset
Daylight Saving
vs London
Population~1.8 mil.

The exact current time in Bucharest is displayed live above, synchronized with international NTP servers. The capital of Romania operates on the time zone (), currently at from UTC. . Bucharest shares the same time zone as Sofia, Athens, Helsinki, Riga, Tallinn and Vilnius — all on Eastern European Time (EET/EEST), under the IANA identifier Europe/Bucharest.

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Bucharest Time vs World Cities – Live Comparison

CityCurrent TimeTime Zonevs Bucharest
🇷🇴 Bucharest±0
🇬🇧 London
🇩🇪 Berlin
🇺🇸 New York
🇺🇸 Los Angeles
🇦🇪 DubaiGST UTC+4
🇮🇳 MumbaiIST UTC+5:30
🇯🇵 TokyoJST UTC+9
🇦🇺 Sydney
02

Daylight Saving Time in Romania – EET & EEST Explained

☀️ Summer Time (EEST) UTC+3 EEST — Eastern European Summer Time
❄️ Standard Time (EET) UTC+2 EET — Eastern European Time

💡 How Romania changes its clocks: Clocks spring forward on the last Sunday in March at 03:00 local EET (becoming 04:00 EEST), and fall back on the last Sunday in October at 04:00 local EEST (becoming 03:00 EET), in line with all EU member states. Because the UK changes clocks on exactly the same dates, Bucharest is always exactly 2 hours ahead of London, every single day of the year. Bucharest is also always exactly 1 hour ahead of Berlin, Vienna, Prague and Budapest since they all switch on the same schedule. For most of the year Bucharest is ahead of New York, with a brief transition window each spring when the US changes clocks roughly 3 weeks before Europe.

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Bucharest Time Zone Converter – Compare with World Cities

Enter a Bucharest time to convert
AM Bucharest (EET / EEST)
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Bucharest – Geography & Location Facts

🌍LocationWallachian PlainSouthern Romania · ~60 km north of the Danube · gateway to South-East Europe
📌GPS Coordinates44.4268° N26.1025° E — well within solar time range for UTC+2
⛰️Elevation~85 m avgFlat Wallachian Plain; central streets ~70 m, northern districts up to ~90 m
📐City area228 km²6 administrative sectors · metropolitan area ~1,821 km²
🌡️ClimateDfa (Köppen)Humid continental — hot summers (30–34°C), cold winters (−5 to 2°C), ~2,100 sun hrs/yr
🌊Main RiversDâmbovița & ColentinaDâmbovița flows through the centre · Colentina forms a chain of northern lakes
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Population & Administrative Data

Population (city)~1.8 million
Metropolitan area~2.4 million
Density~8,000 people/km²
Official languageRomanian
CurrencyRomanian Leu (RON, lei)
International dial code+40
Internet domain.ro
Administrative divisions6 sectors (Sectoare 1–6)
Drives onRight 🚗
ISO country codeRO-B
06

A Brief History of Bucharest

  • 20 Sept 1459 The earliest surviving written reference to Bucharest appears in a document issued by Vlad III — Vlad the Impaler — granting trade privileges from “the citadel of Bucharest” (cetatea Bucureștilor). The city’s name is believed to derive from the personal name Bucur, a legendary shepherd credited with founding a settlement on the banks of the Dâmbovița. A small court (Curtea Veche) and a network of merchants and craftsmen had already made the site a thriving crossing point on the southern Wallachian plain.
  • 1659 Bucharest becomes the permanent capital of the Principality of Wallachia, replacing Târgoviște. Its central location on the plain, relative distance from Ottoman-controlled Danubian fortresses and growing commercial importance had made it the de facto political heart for decades. Over the following century, successive princes build churches, palaces and caravanserais around the old court, and the city absorbs strong Ottoman, Greek and Levantine cultural influences during the Phanariot era (1716–1821).
  • 1848 The Wallachian Revolution of 1848 erupts in Bucharest, part of the broader European Spring of Nations. Romanian intellectuals demand a modern constitution, abolition of serfdom and national sovereignty. The revolt is swiftly suppressed by Ottoman and Russian intervention, but the movement plants the seeds of Romanian national consciousness. Within a decade its leaders — many educated in Paris — return to drive the country toward unification.
  • 1862 & 1881 Following the union of Wallachia and Moldavia under Alexandru Ioan Cuza in 1859, Bucharest becomes the capital of the United Romanian Principalities in 1862. In 1881 it is proclaimed capital of the Kingdom of Romania under Carol I of Hohenzollern. The ensuing Belle Époque decades transform the city: Haussmann-inspired boulevards, the Romanian Athenaeum (1888), grand ministry buildings, and a vibrant literary and café culture earn Bucharest the enduring nickname “Little Paris of the East.”
  • 1916 – 1918 Romania enters World War I on the Entente side in August 1916. After early military reverses, German forces occupy Bucharest from December 1916 to November 1918, systematically looting grain, oil and resources. Despite this, Romania emerges on the winning side: the post-war settlements bring Greater Romania into being, nearly doubling national territory through the addition of Transylvania, Bessarabia and Bukovina, and making Bucharest the capital of a significantly enlarged state.
  • 10 Nov 1940 A catastrophic year for Romania: territorial losses to the USSR (Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, June), to Hungary (Northern Transylvania, August via the Second Vienna Award) and to Bulgaria (Southern Dobruja) precede a devastating earthquake measuring 7.4 on the Richter scale on 10 November 1940. More than 1,000 people are killed across Romania and hundreds of Bucharest buildings — many of them the grand Belle Époque structures of the 1880s–1910s — are severely damaged or destroyed.
  • 23 Aug 1944 King Mihai I orchestrates a palace coup that removes dictator Ion Antonescu and switches Romania to the Allied side, shortening the war in South-East Europe by weeks. Soviet forces enter Bucharest days later. By December 1947, Communist pressure forces King Mihai’s abdication; the Romanian People’s Republic is proclaimed, beginning over four decades of Communist rule — the last and most repressive phase of which will reshape Bucharest’s physical landscape beyond recognition.
  • 4 Mar 1977 A magnitude 7.2 earthquake strikes Romania on 4 March 1977 at 21:22 local time. In Bucharest alone, 33 multi-storey buildings collapse, killing 1,578 people and leaving 35,000 homeless. Nicolae Ceaușescu uses the reconstruction effort to accelerate his “systematization” programme — demolishing entire historic quarters, Orthodox churches, synagogues and aristocratic mansions to build the vast Civic Centre and the gargantuan Palace of the People through the 1980s.
  • Dec 1989 The Romanian Revolution of December 1989 — the only violent overthrow among the Eastern European democratic transitions of that year — begins with protests in Timișoara (16 December) and reaches Bucharest by 21 December. On 22 December, Nicolae Ceaușescu and his wife Elena flee by helicopter from the roof of the Central Committee building. Captured at Târgoviște, they are tried by military tribunal and executed on 25 December 1989. The revolution claims over 1,000 lives across Romania.
  • 2007 – Today Romania joins the European Union on 1 January 2007. Bucharest rapidly emerges as one of Central and Eastern Europe’s fastest-growing economies, driven by IT & software outsourcing, financial services and a booming consumer market. The historic Old Town (Centrul Vechi) is revived as a cultural and nightlife destination. The Palace of Parliament — once a symbol of Communist megalomania — is now the largest building in the EU by floor area and one of Bucharest’s most-visited attractions. Annual visitor numbers exceed 3 million.
07

Top Tourist Attractions in Bucharest

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Palace of Parliament (Casa Poporului) The second-largest administrative building in the world by floor area, after the Pentagon — 365,000 m² of usable space, an 86,000 m² footprint, 1,100 rooms, 480 chandeliers and 12 above-ground floors with 8 below. Construction began in 1984 under Ceaușescu’s orders on the site of a demolished historic quarter. Today it houses the Romanian Parliament and is open for guided tours. The sheer scale is best appreciated by walking around its perimeter.
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Romanian Athenaeum (Ateneul Român) Bucharest’s most beloved landmark — a circular neoclassical concert hall completed in 1888, built through a public subscription campaign under the slogan “Dati un leu pentru Ateneu” (Give a leu for the Athenaeum). Home of the George Enescu Philharmonic Orchestra, it is inscribed on the UNESCO Memory of the World Register. The interior rotunda, with its panoramic fresco depicting Romanian history, is open to visitors on concert nights and during the annual George Enescu Festival.
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Arcul de Triumf Built in its permanent form in 1936 to commemorate Romania’s participation in World War I, the 27-metre triumphal arch stands on the elegant tree-lined Șoseaua Kiseleff boulevard. Modelled on the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, it features bas-reliefs of historical figures and can be climbed for rooftop views over northern Bucharest. The arch is illuminated at night and forms the focal point of national parades.
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Herăstrău Park & Village Museum At 187 hectares, Herăstrău (officially Regele Mihai I Park) is the largest park in Bucharest, built around a natural lake on the Colentina river. Popular for boat rides, cycling and weekend leisure. The adjoining Village Museum (Muzeul Satului), established in 1936, is one of Europe’s finest open-air ethnographic museums, with over 300 traditional houses, churches, mills and other structures transported from all regions of Romania.
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Old Town – Centrul Vechi / Lipscani The medieval merchant quarter centred on Strada Lipscani — named after the traders who brought goods from Leipzig (Lipsca in Romanian). Home to the Old Princely Court (Curtea Veche), the oldest surviving medieval structure in Bucharest, dating to the 15th century. Today the area is the city’s main nightlife and restaurant hub, with terrace cafés, craft bars and clubs packed into beautifully restored 18th and 19th-century buildings.
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Calea Victoriei & CEC Palace Calea Victoriei (Victory Avenue) is Bucharest’s oldest and most prestigious boulevard, dating to 1692. Lined with palatial 19th-century ministry buildings, museums and hotels, it connects the Old Town to the northern residential districts. Its crown jewel is the CEC Palace (1900) — a spectacular Beaux-Arts building housing Romania’s oldest savings institution, with a glazed dome and ornate façade visible from the street.

✈️ Bucharest Airports

AirportIATADistanceTransport to centreNotes
Henri Coandă International Airport (Otopeni)OTP~16 km northMetro M6 express (~40 min to Gara de Nord); bus 780/783; taxi/rideshare🌍 Main international hub — busiest airport in Romania
Băneasa – Aurel Vlaicu AirportBBU~8 km north~20 min by taxi or bus✈️ Secondary — charter, business aviation & some low-cost routes
08

Romanian Food Culture – What to Eat in Bucharest

🍖 Mici (Mititei) Romania’s most iconic street food — skinless grilled minced-meat rolls made from a blend of beef, pork and lamb, seasoned with garlic, thyme, caraway and baking soda. The name means “little ones.” Served with mustard and fresh bread, eaten at street stalls, football matches and summer barbecues across the country.
🥜 Sarmale Romania’s national dish — minced pork and rice rolled in pickled cabbage or vine leaves, slow-cooked in tomato sauce with thyme and smoked meat. Every family guards its own recipe. Served with mămăligă (polenta) and smetana (sour cream). Indispensable at Christmas, Easter and any family celebration.
🍜 Ciorbă & Mămăligă Romanian ciorbă (sour soup) is the backbone of the national cuisine — varieties include ciorbă de burtă (tripe soup), ciorbă de perişoare (meatball soup) and the cream-based ciorbă rădăuțeană. Mămăligă (polenta) is the ancient Romanian staple, served with cheese, sour cream or alongside meat dishes.
🧁 Papanași The most popular Romanian dessert — deep-fried doughnuts made from fresh curd cheese (brânză de vaci), topped with generous helpings of smetana (sour cream) and sour cherry jam (dulceață de vișine). Found on practically every traditional restaurant menu in Bucharest. Unmissable.
🍷 Ţuică & Romanian Wine Ţuică (plum brandy) is Romania’s national spirit, produced since at least the 15th century. Double-distilled pălincă reaches 50–60% ABV. Romanian wines are gaining international recognition: indigenous varieties Fetească Neagră and Tămήioasă Românească are distinctive, with the Dealu Mare and Murfatlar wine regions producing award-winning bottles.
🍞 Cozonac & Craft Coffee Cozonac is Romania’s festive sweet braided bread, filled with walnuts, poppy seeds or cocoa — baked for Christmas and Easter in every household. Bucharest has developed a thriving specialty coffee and craft beer scene since the 2010s, with independent roasters and micro-breweries making the city a genuine food-and-drink destination within Central and Eastern Europe.
09

Practical Travel Information – Bucharest

💧 Tap waterTechnically safe to drink — Bucharest water meets EU quality standards ✅. Many locals prefer bottled water due to the taste from older pipes in some neighbourhoods; in modern buildings tap water is generally fine. Bottled water is cheap and universally available.
🚌 Metro & transportBucharest has 5 metro lines (M1–M5), plus a dedicated airport express metro line M6 to Henri Coandă Airport, opened in 2020 (~40 min to Gara de Nord). Trams, buses and trolleybuses cover the wider city. Single-trip metro tickets and 10-trip cards are available at vending machines; validate before boarding. Inspectors are active on all modes of transport.
⚡ Power outletsType C / F (Europlug / Schuko) — 230 V / 50 Hz. UK visitors need a Type C/F adaptor; US visitors need both an adaptor and a voltage converter for non-dual-voltage devices.
🗣️ LanguageRomanian — a Romance language descended directly from Latin, surrounded by Slavic languages. It retains strong Latin structure with French, Italian and Turkish loanwords. English is widely spoken in hotels, restaurants and tourist areas; younger Romanians are generally comfortable in English. French and Italian also have good penetration.
💰 CurrencyRomanian Leu (RON, lei) — not the Euro, despite EU membership since 2007. All prices are in lei. Exchange at official casă de schimb offices or bank ATMs (bancomat); avoid informal street exchangers. Romania has not set a firm date for Euro adoption as of 2026.
🛂 Tipping10–15% is standard in restaurants. Communicate the tip by telling the server the total you wish to pay when settling, rather than leaving cash. Taxi drivers and hotel staff appreciate small tips. Some restaurants include a service charge — check the bill before adding more.
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Frequently Asked Questions – Bucharest Time Zone & EET/EEST

Bucharest uses EET (Eastern European Time, UTC+2) in winter and EEST (Eastern European Summer Time, UTC+3) in summer. The IANA timezone identifier is Europe/Bucharest. Bucharest shares its time zone with Sofia, Athens, Helsinki, Riga, Tallinn and Vilnius. It is one hour ahead of Berlin, Prague, Vienna and Budapest, and two hours ahead of London.
Yes. Romania observes Daylight Saving Time in line with all EU member states. Clocks advance 1 hour on the last Sunday of March at 03:00 local EET (becoming 04:00 EEST), and fall back 1 hour on the last Sunday of October at 04:00 local EEST (becoming 03:00 EET). The EU has discussed abolishing seasonal clock changes but as of 2026 the practice continues across all member states.
Bucharest is always exactly 2 hours ahead of London throughout the entire year. In winter, Bucharest is on EET (UTC+2) and London is on GMT (UTC+0). In summer, Bucharest moves to EEST (UTC+3) and London moves to BST (UTC+1). Because Romania and the UK change their clocks on exactly the same dates — the last Sunday in March and the last Sunday in October — the 2-hour gap never changes.
For most of the year, Bucharest is 7 hours ahead of New York (EET vs EST in winter; EEST vs EDT in summer). However, the US changes its clocks roughly 3 weeks before Europe in spring (US: 2nd Sunday March; EU: last Sunday March) and Europe falls back roughly 1 week before the US in autumn. During these brief transition windows the difference temporarily shifts to 6 hours. The rest of the year the difference is a steady 7 hours.
No. Bucharest is on EET/EEST (UTC+2 / UTC+3), while Berlin, Prague, Vienna and Budapest are on CET/CEST (UTC+1 / UTC+2). Bucharest is therefore always exactly 1 hour ahead of these cities. Both zones change clocks on exactly the same calendar dates each year, so the 1-hour difference is constant all year round. Geographically, Bucharest lies at 26.1°E longitude, placing it firmly within the solar-time range for UTC+2 — a full 12 degrees east of Berlin.
EET (Eastern European Time) is UTC+2, used from late October to late March — the winter standard time period. EEST (Eastern European Summer Time) is UTC+3, used from late March to late October — the summer period. The difference between the two is exactly 1 hour. EET is shared by Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and others. When EEST is active, Bucharest’s offset of UTC+3 matches Moscow time (MSK, which does not observe DST).
No. Romania has been an EU member since 2007 but has not adopted the Euro. The official currency is the Romanian Leu (RON, lei). Prices throughout Bucharest are quoted in lei; some tourist-facing businesses may display euro prices informally, but payment in lei is standard. Romania must meet the Maastricht convergence criteria before Euro adoption; no fixed accession date has been announced as of 2026.
Bucharest is served by two airports. Henri Coanță International Airport (IATA: OTP), located ~16 km north in Otopeni, is the main international hub and Romania’s busiest airport. The dedicated metro line M6 connects it to the city centre (Gara de Nord) in approximately 40 minutes. Băneasa – Aurel Vlaicu Airport (IATA: BBU), ~8 km north, handles charter, business aviation and some low-cost operations.