Time in Malaysia


Malaysian Standard Time or Malaysian Time is the standard time used in Malaysia. It is 8 hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time and Coordinated Universal Time. The local mean time in Kuala Lumpur was originally UTC+06:46:46. Peninsular Malaysia used this local mean time until 1 January 1901, when they changed to Singapore mean time UTC+06:55:25. Between the end of the Second World War and the formation of Malaysia on 16 September 1963, it was known as British Malayan Standard Time, which was UTC+07:30. At 2330 hrs local time of 31 December 1981, people in Peninsular Malaysia adjusted their clocks and watches ahead by 30 minutes to become 00:00 hours local time of 1 January 1982, to match the time in use in East Malaysia, which is UTC+08:00. SGT as follow on the same until now.

History

Time in Peninsular Malaysia

Time in East Malaysia

The Malaysian government declared that people in Peninsular Malaysia would move their clocks ahead by 30 min to match the time in use in East Malaysia on 31 December 1981. However, many found this to be awkward, as most of the population live in Peninsular Malaysia rather than in East Malaysia. The time was switched on 1 January 1982 at 00:00 to 00:30.

Timekeeper

On 1 January 1990, the Malaysian Cabinet appointed the National Metrology Laboratory as the official timekeeper of Malaysia. The Malaysian Standard Time is derived from five atomic clocks maintained by Sirim.

IANA time zone database

The IANA time zone database contains two zones for Malaysia in the file zone.tab:
c.c.*coordinates*TZ*comments*UTC offsetUTC offset DSTNotes
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