Current Time in Warsaw
Live NTP-synced clock · CET / CEST time zone · Weather, world city comparisons & complete guide
The exact current time in Warsaw is displayed live above, synchronized with international NTP servers.
The capital of Poland operates on the … time zone
(…), currently at … from UTC.
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Warsaw shares the same time zone as Berlin, Vienna, Prague, Budapest, Rome, Paris and many other European capitals — all on Central European Time (CET/CEST), under the IANA identifier Europe/Warsaw.
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Warsaw Time vs World Cities – Live Comparison
| City | Current Time | Time Zone | vs Warsaw |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇵🇱 Warsaw | … | … | ±0 |
| 🇬🇧 London | … | … | … |
| 🇩🇪 Berlin | … | … | … |
| 🇷🇴 Bucharest | … | … | … |
| 🇺🇸 New York | … | … | … |
| 🇺🇸 Los Angeles | … | … | … |
| 🇦🇪 Dubai | … | GST UTC+4 | … |
| 🇯🇵 Tokyo | … | JST UTC+9 | … |
| 🇦🇺 Sydney | … | … | … |
Daylight Saving Time in Poland – CET & CEST Explained
💡 How Poland changes its clocks: Clocks spring forward on the last Sunday in March at 02:00 local CET (becoming 03:00 CEST), and fall back on the last Sunday in October at 03:00 local CEST (becoming 02:00 CET), in line with all EU member states. Because the UK changes clocks on exactly the same dates, Warsaw is always exactly 1 hour ahead of London, every day of the year. Warsaw is also always exactly 1 hour behind Bucharest, and in the same time zone as Berlin, Prague, Vienna and Budapest. For most of the year Warsaw is … ahead of New York, with a brief 5-hour window in spring when the US changes clocks roughly 3 weeks before Europe.
Warsaw Time Zone Converter – Compare with World Cities
Warsaw – Geography & Location Facts
Population & Administrative Data
| Population (city) | ~1.86 million |
| Metropolitan area | ~3.1 million |
| Administrative divisions | 18 districts (dzielnice) |
| Official language | Polish |
| Currency | Polish Złoty (PLN, zł) |
| International dial code | +48 |
| Internet domain | .pl |
| Voivodeship | Masovian (Mazowieckie) |
| Drives on | Right 🚗 |
| EU member since | 1 May 2004 |
A Brief History of Warsaw
- ~1300 – 1596 A settlement on the banks of the Vistula grows into a fortified town under the Dukes of Masovia. The Old Town (Stare Miasto) is established with its market square and Gothic St John’s Cathedral. In 1596, King Sigismund III Vasa transfers the royal court from Kraków to Warsaw, making it the capital of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth — one of the largest states in Europe. Warsaw’s central location on the plain, equidistant from the Commonwealth’s eastern and western borders, drives this decision.
- 3 May 1791 The Polish parliament adopts the Constitution of May 3rd, 1791 — the first modern written constitution in Europe, and the second in the world after the United States Constitution. Signed at the Royal Castle in Warsaw, it abolished aristocratic veto rights, strengthened the executive, extended rights to the bourgeoisie, and attempted to modernise the Polish state. The constitution provoked alarm among neighbouring monarchies and contributed to the Second Partition of Poland the following year.
- 1795 – 1918 The Third Partition of Poland (1795) erases Poland from the map entirely, divided between Russia, Prussia and Austria. Warsaw falls first under Prussian control, then becomes the capital of the Napoleonic Duchy of Warsaw (1807–1815) — a brief period of hope. After Napoleon’s defeat, Warsaw becomes the capital of the Congress Kingdom of Poland (1815), nominally autonomous but under Russian dominance. Failed uprisings in 1830–31 and 1863–64 are crushed, and Warsaw endures Russification. Independence is finally restored on 11 November 1918, with Warsaw as the capital of the reborn Polish Republic.
- 1939 – 1945 Nazi Germany invades Poland on 1 September 1939; Warsaw falls after a heroic three-week siege on 28 September. The occupiers establish the Warsaw Ghetto in 1940, confining over 400,000 Jewish residents. In April–May 1943, ghetto residents launch the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising — the largest Jewish armed resistance of WWII. The Germans suppress the revolt and raze the ghetto. In August–October 1944, the Warsaw Uprising (Powstanie Warszawskie) — led by the Polish Home Army — fights for 63 days in a desperate bid to liberate the city. After the uprising’s defeat, the Nazis systematically demolish Warsaw building by building: approximately 85% of the city is destroyed by January 1945, when Soviet forces enter.
- 1945 – 1989 Post-war Warsaw undertakes one of the most remarkable reconstruction efforts in history. The Old Town is painstakingly rebuilt from historical records, paintings and photographs — earning UNESCO World Heritage status in 1980. The Stalinist Palace of Culture and Science is completed in 1955 as a “gift” from the Soviet Union — a 237-metre landmark that dominates the skyline. The Communist period sees rapid industrialisation and urban expansion, but also suppression, censorship and periodic workers’ revolts. The Solidarity trade union movement, born in Gdańsk in 1980, helps drive Poland toward democracy.
- 1989 & 2004 The Round Table Agreements of 1989 lead to Poland’s first free elections since WWII, ending Communist rule peacefully. Tadeusz Mazowiecki becomes the first non-Communist prime minister in the Eastern Bloc. Poland transforms rapidly: the economy is liberalised, Warsaw’s skyline fills with glass office towers, and foreign investment floods in. On 1 May 2004, Poland joins the European Union in the largest single EU enlargement. Warsaw emerges as one of the fastest-growing major capitals in Europe, driven by technology, financial services, business process outsourcing and a booming consumer economy.
- Today Warsaw is one of Central Europe’s fastest-growing economies, with a GDP per capita rivalling many Western European cities. The city is a major hub for technology companies, financial institutions, legal services and creative industries. Warsaw attracts over 6 million tourists annually and is consistently ranked among the top cities in Europe for quality of life, startup ecosystems and foreign direct investment. The contrast between the rebuilt medieval Old Town, the Stalinist Palace of Culture, and gleaming modern skyscrapers makes Warsaw one of Europe’s most visually distinctive capital cities.
Top Tourist Attractions in Warsaw
✈️ Warsaw Airports
| Airport | IATA | Distance | Transport to centre | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Warsaw Frédéric Chopin Airport | WAW | ~10 km SW | Metro M2 + SKM train (~20 min); bus 175/188; taxi ~25 min | 🌍 Main international hub — handles ~20 million pax/yr; LOT Polish Airlines hub |
| Warsaw Modlin Airport | WMI | ~35 km north | ModlinBus to Warsaw Centre ~75 min; also Koleje Mazowieckie train | ✈️ Secondary — Ryanair & Wizz Air low-cost routes |
Polish Food Culture – What to Eat in Warsaw
Practical Travel Information – Warsaw
| 💧 Tap water | Safe to drink ✅ — Warsaw tap water fully meets EU quality standards. Locals drink it routinely; bottled water is also widely available and inexpensive if preferred. |
| 🚌 Metro & transport | Warsaw has 2 metro lines: M1 (north–south, opened 1995) and M2 (east–west, opened 2015). An extensive tram and bus network covers the rest of the city. The Chopin Airport is served by the SKM suburban rail and bus lines 175/188. A single-ride ticket covers all modes for 20 minutes; 75-minute and daily passes are available. Validate tickets before boarding — inspectors are common. |
| ⚡ Power outlets | Type C / F (Europlug / Schuko) — 230 V / 50 Hz. UK visitors need an adaptor; US visitors need adaptor and voltage converter for non-dual-voltage devices. |
| 🗣️ Language | Polish — a West Slavic language with complex grammar and a consonant-heavy alphabet (including letters like ś, ż, ł, ó). English is widely spoken in hotels, restaurants, shops and tourist areas, especially among younger Poles. German is also common in business contexts. A few words of Polish are warmly appreciated by locals. |
| 💰 Currency | Polish Złoty (PLN, zł) — not the Euro, despite EU membership since 2004. “Złoty” means “golden” in Polish. All prices are in złoty; some tourist-facing restaurants quote in euros but payment in złoty is standard. ATMs (bankomat) are plentiful. Exchange at official kantor offices for the best rates; avoid hotel and airport exchangers. Poland has not set a firm date for Euro adoption. |
| 🛂 Tipping | 10–15% is standard in restaurants. Tell the server the amount you wish to pay when settling the bill, rather than leaving cash. Taxi drivers appreciate rounding up the fare. In cafes and bars, rounding up is common. Some upscale restaurants include a service charge — check the bill. |
Frequently Asked Questions – Warsaw Time Zone & CET/CEST
Europe/Warsaw. Warsaw shares its time zone with Berlin, Vienna, Prague, Budapest, Rome, Paris, Madrid, Brussels, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Oslo, Copenhagen and many other European capitals — it is the most widely shared time zone in Europe.