Chamorro Time Zone


The Chamorro Time Zone, formerly the Guam Time Zone, is a United States time zone which observes standard time ten hours ahead of Coordinated Universal Time. The clock time in this zone is based on the mean solar time of the 150th meridian east of the Greenwich Observatory.
The zone includes the U.S. territories of Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands, where the Chamorro people are the original inhabitants. Since Daylight Saving Time is not observed anywhere in this zone, the time is always known as Chamorro Standard Time.
The zone is two hours behind Wake Island Time Zone and 15 hours ahead of North American Eastern Time Zone. As of March 8, 2020, it is the easternmost time zone shown on the U.S. government's time.gov webpage, although Wake, Howland and Baker Islands are U.S. territories in more easterly time zones that are not shown.
Chamorro Standard Time shares the same time as Australian Eastern Standard Time.

Populated areas and major cities

The Mariana Islands were not part of any time zone legislated by the U.S. Congress until the Chamorro time zone was established by Public Law 106-564 on December 23, 2000. Prior to 2000, Guam's standard time was based on territorial Public Law 5-25 which designated the time Guam Standard Time. The law was established long before the Northern Mariana Islands came under U.S. sovereignty in 1986, and still remains in the book today despite federal overlap.