The exact current time in Berlin is displayed live above, synchronized with international NTP servers.
The capital of Germany operates on the … time zone
(…), at an offset of … from UTC.
….
Berlin shares the same time zone as Paris, Madrid, Rome, Warsaw and over 40 other European cities — all following the same Daylight Saving schedule.
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Daylight Saving Time in Germany – CET & CEST Explained
☀️ Summer Time (CEST)UTC+2CEST — Central European Summer Time…
❄️ Standard Time (CET)UTC+1CET — Central European Time…
💡 Important note: Germany, France, Spain, Italy and most of continental Europe all change their clocks on the same Sunday — the last Sunday in March (spring forward) and the last Sunday in October (fall back). The UK changes on the same dates, so Berlin is always exactly 1 hour ahead of London, every single day of the year. Clocks spring forward at 02:00 local CET (becoming 03:00 CEST), and fall back at 03:00 local CEST (becoming 02:00 CET). For most of the year Berlin is … ahead of New York, with a brief transition window in spring when the US and EU change clocks on different dates.
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Berlin Time Zone Converter – Compare with World Cities
📌GPS Coordinates52.5200°N13.4050°E (east of Greenwich)
⛰️Elevation~34 mLow-lying glacial plain with gentle hills
📐Area (city-state)892 km²One of Germany’s 16 federal states
🌡️ClimateCfb (Köppen)Oceanic — mild summers, cold winters, ~1,700 sun hrs/yr
🌊Main RiversSpree & HavelOver 180 km of waterways and 1,700 bridges
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Population & Administrative Data
Population (city of Berlin)
~3.7 million
Berlin–Brandenburg metropolitan area
~6.0 million
Density
~4,100 people/km²
Official language
German
Currency
Euro (€, EUR)
International dial code
+49 (030 Berlin)
Internet domain
.de / .berlin
Postcode format
1xxxx (10115–14199)
Drives on
Right 🚗
ISO code
DE-BE
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A Brief History of Berlin
1237 – 1307The twin trading settlements of Cölln (1237) and Berlin (1244) are founded on islands in the Spree river by German merchants. They formally merge into a single city in 1307, establishing the nucleus of what will become the largest city in the German-speaking world.
1701King Frederick I crowns himself King in Prussia in Königsberg, making Berlin the capital of the new Kingdom of Prussia. The city begins its rapid transformation into a royal residence and seat of power, commissioning grand boulevards, palaces and the iconic Unter den Linden.
1871Following Prussia’s victory in the Franco-Prussian War, Otto von Bismarck unifies the German states. Berlin becomes the capital of the German Empire (Deutsches Reich) under Kaiser Wilhelm I, triggering an era of explosive industrial growth and making it one of Europe’s great metropolises.
1933 – 1945Berlin becomes the capital of the Third Reich under Adolf Hitler. The city is subjected to massive Allied bombing raids from 1943 onward and falls to Soviet forces in a devastating battle in April–May 1945. The war ends with Berlin in ruins and divided into four Allied occupation zones.
1961 – 1989The Berlin Wall is erected on 13 August 1961, dividing the city for 28 years. The fall of the Wall on 9 November 1989 becomes one of history’s most iconic moments, symbolising the end of the Cold War and the beginning of German reunification, completed on 3 October 1990.
TodayBerlin is the EU’s largest capital city by population and a global hub for technology, creative industries, art and nightlife. Home to three UNESCO World Heritage Sites, world-class museums on Museumsinsel, one of Europe’s fastest-growing start-up ecosystems, and a cultural scene that draws millions of visitors every year.
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Top Tourist Attractions in Berlin
🏛️
Brandenburg GateBerlin’s most iconic landmark and symbol of German reunification. The 18th-century neoclassical triumphal arch stands at the heart of the city, illuminated at night and surrounded by the historic Pariser Platz.
🏛️
Reichstag BuildingGermany’s federal parliament, rebuilt by Norman Foster with a stunning glass dome open to visitors. Pre-booked roof terrace access offers panoramic views over central Berlin and the Tiergarten.
🏛️
Museumsinsel (Museum Island)A UNESCO World Heritage island complex housing five world-class museums: Pergamon, Altes Museum, Neues Museum (with Nefertiti’s bust), Alte Nationalgalerie, and Bode-Museum.
🔵
East Side GalleryThe longest surviving stretch of the Berlin Wall (1.3 km), transformed into the world’s largest open-air gallery featuring murals by over 100 international artists, including the famous “Fraternal Kiss” painting.
🌳
TiergartenBerlin’s vast central park — 210 hectares of forests, meadows and waterways in the heart of the city. Home to the Victory Column (Siegessäule), rowing boats and the famous Berlin Zoo on its western edge.
🖼️
DDR MuseumAn immersive interactive museum exploring daily life in East Germany, with exhibits you can touch, drive (a Trabant simulator!) and sit in. One of Berlin’s most visited museums for families and history enthusiasts.
✈️ Berlin Airports
Airport
IATA Code
Distance
Transport
Type
Berlin Brandenburg Willy Brandt
BER
18 km south-east
~30 min (S-Bahn S9/FEX)
🌍 Main international hub
Berlin-Schönefeld
SXF
18 km south-east
Now integrated into BER Terminal 5
✈️ Incorporated into BER
Berlin-Tegel (historical)
TXL
8 km north-west
Closed Nov 2020 — urban redevelopment
🏗️ Former main airport
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German & Berliner Food Culture
🌭CurrywurstBerlin’s most famous street food — sliced pork sausage doused in curried ketchup. Invented in 1949 in Charlottenburg; over 70 million sold in Berlin annually.
🥧Döner KebabBerlin is the world capital of Döner Kebab. The modern version was invented here in the 1970s by Turkish immigrant Kadir Nurman. Over 1,500 Döner shops operate in the city.
🍩Berliner PfannkuchenBerlin’s iconic jam doughnut — a deep-fried yeast pastry filled with plum jam or vanilla cream and dusted with powdered sugar. Sold in every bakery year-round, and a traditional New Year’s Eve treat (Silvester).
🍞Bakery TraditionGermany has over 3,200 bread varieties — more than any other country. Berlin’s Bäckereien (bakeries) are a cornerstone of daily life, serving dense Vollkornbrot, Brezeln and the iconic Berlin-style Schrippe roll.
🍖Eisbein & HaxeTraditional Berliner restaurant fare: Eisbein (pickled pork knuckle) with sauerkraut and mashed peas, a winter staple. Old Berlin taverns (Kneipen) serve it with a glass of local lager.
🧆Königsberger KlopseTender poached meatballs in a creamy white caper sauce — a Prussian classic adopted as a Berlin staple. Made from minced veal and pork with anchovy and onion, served with boiled potatoes and beetroot.
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Practical Travel Information
💧 Tap water
Safe to drink ✅ — Berlin tap water is among the purest in Germany, supplied from local groundwater. Restaurants will provide it on request.
🚌 Public transport
10-line U-Bahn (metro), S-Bahn (overground rail), extensive tram network (largest in Western Europe), buses and BVG e-scooters & e-bikes. A Berlin Welcome Card covers unlimited travel.
⚡ Power outlets
Type F (Schuko) — 230V / 50 Hz. UK/US visitors need an adaptor.
🗣️ Language
German — English widely spoken in the city centre, tourist areas, hotels and most restaurants. Berlin has a large expat English-speaking community.
💳 Payments
Germany is still cash-heavy by Western European standards. Many small restaurants, bars and markets prefer Bargeld (cash). Card acceptance is improving rapidly.
🛂 Tipping
Round up the bill or add ~10% in restaurants. Say the amount you want to pay when the waiter brings the bill — do not leave cash on the table.
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Frequently Asked Questions – Berlin Time Zone & CET/CEST
Berlin uses CET (Central European Time, UTC+1) in winter and CEST (Central European Summer Time, UTC+2) in summer. The IANA timezone identifier is Europe/Berlin. Germany has been on CET continuously since 1940 (with minor exceptions in the immediate post-war period), making it the definitive Central European reference timezone alongside Paris, Madrid and Rome.
Yes. Germany observes Daylight Saving Time. Clocks advance 1 hour on the last Sunday of March at 02:00 local CET (becoming 03:00 CEST), and fall back 1 hour on the last Sunday of October at 03:00 local CEST (becoming 02:00 CET). Germany follows EU-wide DST rules, identical to France, Spain, Italy, Poland, the Netherlands and the majority of EU member states. The EU has repeatedly discussed abolishing seasonal clock changes, but as of 2026 the practice continues.
Berlin is always exactly 1 hour ahead of London, every single day of the year. Both Germany and the UK change their clocks on the same last Sunday of March and October, so the 1-hour gap never changes regardless of the season, the month, or Daylight Saving transitions.
For most of the year, Berlin is 6 hours ahead of New York (CET vs EST in winter; CEST vs EDT in summer). However, the US changes its clocks roughly 3 weeks before Europe in spring, and Europe falls back roughly 1 week before the US in autumn. During these brief transition windows, the difference temporarily shifts to 5 hours. Specifically: in spring, after the US switches to EDT but before Europe switches to CEST, Berlin is only 5 hours ahead. In autumn, after Europe reverts to CET but before the US reverts to EST, Berlin is also only 5 hours ahead. Outside these windows, the difference is reliably 6 hours.
Yes. Berlin, Paris, Madrid, Rome, Amsterdam, Brussels, Vienna and Warsaw are all on CET/CEST — the same UTC+1/UTC+2 offset, switching on exactly the same dates each year. The time is identical between all these cities at every moment of the year. Geographically, Berlin lies at 13°E longitude, which is actually close to the “correct” solar time for UTC+1, making it one of the best-aligned major capitals on CET.
CET (Central European Time) is UTC+1, used from late October to late March — the winter period. CEST (Central European Summer Time) is UTC+2, used from late March to late October — the summer period. The difference between the two is exactly 1 hour. When CEST is active, clocks are 1 hour ahead of where solar noon would suggest — giving longer, brighter evenings. Both names refer to the same geographic timezone, simply at different offsets depending on the time of year.
Berlin is served by Berlin Brandenburg Willy Brandt Airport (BER), located approximately 18 km south-east of the city centre. BER opened in October 2020, replacing the former airports of Tegel (TXL) and Schönefeld (SXF). It is connected to central Berlin by the S-Bahn lines S9 and the Airport Express (FEX) in around 30 minutes. For current flight times when planning international connections, always verify the Berlin timezone offset for your travel dates, as DST transitions in spring and autumn can affect schedules by 1 hour.
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