Geography

Most timezones

France leads thanks to overseas departments from French Polynesia to French Guiana.

Unit including territories Source IANA tz database Entries 15

Headline finding

France leads the world for most timezones at 12 including territories.

What the numbers show

France's lead at the top of this ranking is 9.1% above the second-place country — a margin tight enough that the top spot has changed hands within the last five years and could change again.

The five countries leading the table — France, United States, Russia, United Kingdom, Australia — together set the global benchmark. The next 10 countries fill the rest of the table, with Chile anchoring the list at 2.

Figures are drawn from IANA tz database. We use this source because it produces a single, internally consistent dataset rather than aggregating from national statistics offices, which makes year-on-year comparison reliable. The next update is expected when the source publishes its next annual release — see the methodology section below for which year of data is currently shown.

Methodology and caveats

What this measures
including territories
Source
IANA tz database
Coverage
Top 15 countries shown. Full source dataset covers all 195 sovereign states where data is available.
Refresh cadence
Updated annually as the source publishes new figures, typically autumn or spring.
Known caveat
Country definitions follow the source: where the UN, the World Bank and the CIA Factbook disagree on borders or recognition, we use the figure as published rather than reconciling between bodies. Comparisons across rankings should be made with this in mind.

Frequently asked

Which country tops the ranking for timezones?

France leads with 12 including territories. United States is second at 11, with Russia in third place. Full top-10 with sources is above.

What's the source for the timezones ranking?

The figures come from IANA tz database. We use this source because it publishes a complete country-by-country dataset using consistent methodology — the alternative of mixing national statistics offices would compromise comparability. Updated annually with the latest available vintage of the data.

How often are the timezones figures updated?

Once a year, in line with the source institution's publishing schedule. Major institutions like the World Bank, IMF and UNESCO publish annual updates in different months — typically autumn or spring — and the figures here reflect the most recently published vintage. The source footer on the ranking table shows which year's data is currently displayed.