UTC−11:00
Time zone From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
UTC−11:00 is an identifier for a time offset from UTC of −11:00. This time is used in Niue, American Samoa, Swains Island, and parts of the United States Minor Outlying Islands.[1] This is the latest inhabited time zone, meaning this is the last inhabited time zone to celebrate the New Year, as the world's latest time zone (UTC-12:00) occurs only in strict nature reserves, such as Howland and Baker Island.
UTC−11:00 | |
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Time zone | |
![]() World map with the time zone highlighted | |
UTC offset | |
UTC | UTC−11:00 |
Current time | |
04:32, 28 April 2025 UTC−11:00 [refresh] | |
Central meridian | |
165 degrees W | |
Date-time group | |
X |

As standard time (year-round)
Principal settlements: Alofi, Pago Pago, Tafuna
Oceania
Pacific Ocean
Polynesia
Formerly within
- Kiribati
- Phoenix Islands (of which only Canton Island is inhabited) (Phoenix Islands Time) advanced 24 hours to the eastern hemisphere side of the International Date Line by skipping December 31, 1994.[3]
- New Zealand
- Tokelau – Time in Tokelau advanced 24 hours to the eastern hemisphere side of the International Date Line by skipping December 30, 2011.[4]
- Samoa – Time in Samoa advanced 24 hours to the eastern hemisphere side of the International Date Line by skipping December 30, 2011.[5]
- United States
- Bering Standard Time – Before Alaska Standard Time was adopted across almost all of Alaska (other than the Aleutian Islands, which adopted the Hawaii–Aleutian Time Zone) in 1983, Nome, and the Aleutian Islands were previously in Bering Standard time.[6]
References
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