Do dogs hate daylight saving time too?

Your dog might seem just as grumpy about the time change as you are—but scientists actually studied their responses.


With daylight saving time starting this month, dogs and their owners will likely lose an hour of sleep, as clocks are set forward. And if you’ve ever wondered if domesticated dogs have as much trouble adjusting to the time change as humans do, it turns out, scientists have looked into this question.

In 2021, researchers in Ontario, Canada, conducted a study of both sled dogs and companion dogs during fall daylight saving time, when we gain an hour and see an earlier sunrise. Both dogs and their human owners or caretakers wore sensors (on their collars and wrists, respectively), which measured movement and activity.

DOG’S DST BEHAVIOR IS A TESTAMENT TO THEIR CLOSE BONDS WITH HUMANS

Mondino, who studies dogs and sleep, notes that light is an important factor, but social interactions and feeding times can also affect circadian rhythm in canines. Dogs are “very, very influenced by their human companions,” she explains. The results of the Ontario study—that companion dogs didn’t need to adjust to daylight saving time—didn’t surprise her, as it aligns with her own research. “We influence them more than the actual sunrise or sunset,” she says.

But he too thinks it has less to do with the dog’s circadian rhythm and more to do with human behavior. “It’s really a change in the habits of people that is associated with the change of DST and the change of season,” Siracusa explains.

.For example, “if you get out of work at five, and you arrive home and you bring your dog out for a walk in the winter, it can be very quiet,” he says. But after daylight saving time in the spring, there’s more sun later in the day—and likely more people and animals out to enjoy it. “For a dog that really does not enjoy proximity to humans and people they don’t know, it might be difficult, and they might be more reactive, more nervous,” Siracusa says. “So, we have seen this type of change in some of our [canine] patients.”

IT IS PLAUSIBLE SOME DOGS ARE IMPACTED, REGARDLESS OF THEIR OWNERS

It is possible some dogs experience disruptions and grumpiness around daylight saving time. “The effect depends on the personality of the dog,” Siracusa adds. “And the same thing for humans, right? Some people really suffer, and some other people adjust very quickly.”

For instance, older dogs tend to lose their circadian rhythm as they age, which can lead to sleep disruptions, Mondino adds. This, in turn, could mean they have a harder time with even an hour of lost sleep as the clocks shift forward. It can affect any dog’s cognition, Mondino says: “They may need to recover that hour by taking more naps during the daytime.” But seniors may be more affected.

“It’s harder to implement schedule changes with an older dog who kind of already is very used to particular routine, right?” Nagendran asks. “We did write a sentence in [the study] that, if you do have older dogs, just take even more care in implementing more gradual changes to their routine.” For all the dog owners lamenting their pup’s confusion, past or present, the study authors acknowledge that they’ve heard all the anecdotes too. – Marti Trgovich for National Geographic

Photography by Ami Vitale, Nat Geo Image Collection

Scroll to Top