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Anleitung5 min read25. Februar 2026
Die Internationale Datumsgrenze erklärt
Die Internationale Datumsgrenze bestimmt, wo ein Kalendertag endet und ein anderer beginnt.
The International Date Line Explained
The International Date Line (IDL) is an imaginary line that runs through the Pacific Ocean, roughly following the 180° meridian. When you cross it, the date changes by one day.
How it works
Traveling westward (Asia → Americas): Skip forward one day
Traveling eastward (Americas → Asia): Go back one day
The time of day stays approximately the same
Why does the date change?
Because the Earth rotates eastward, places to the west are always "later" in the day. At some point, "later" wraps around to "tomorrow." The IDL is where this transition happens.
Why does the line zigzag?
The IDL does not follow the 180° meridian exactly. It zigzags to avoid splitting countries or island groups across two different dates:
Russia — The line bends east to keep all of Russia on the same date
Kiribati — In 1995, Kiribati moved the line east so that all its islands share the same date (making it the first place to see the new year)
Samoa — In 2011, Samoa skipped December 30 entirely by jumping to the western side of the line to align with Australia and New Zealand for trade
Practical effects
ScenarioWhat happens
Flying LA → TokyoYou "lose" a day (depart Tuesday, arrive Thursday)
Flying Tokyo → LAYou "gain" a day (depart Wednesday, arrive Wednesday)
Calling across the lineTuesday in Tokyo = Monday in Honolulu
The Date Line and time zones
The IDL interacts with time zones to create some extreme offsets:
UTC+14 (Kiribati) is 26 hours ahead of UTC-12 (Baker Island)
This means it can be two different calendar dates at the same moment on Earth
Explore time differences between Pacific cities on our [World Map](/world-map).
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