Claims that Earth will soon shift from 24-hour days to 25-hour days have gone viral online. But what does science actually say?
Recent articles circulating on social media suggest that Earth is on the brink of abandoning the familiar 24-hour day, sparking confusion and alarm. The claim, while rooted in real science, leaves out crucial context.
Hereโs what you need to know.
What is being claimed?
Some online articles claim that Earthโs days will soon last 25 hours, implying a dramatic change that could happen within our lifetimeโor at least within the near future.
This framing is misleading.
Whatโs the science behind it?
Scientists have long known that Earthโs rotation is slowly slowing down. The main reason is tidal friction, caused largely by the gravitational pull of the Moon.
As the Moon pulls on Earthโs oceans, it creates tides. This process gradually transfers Earthโs rotational energy to the Moon, causing Earthโs spin to slow down, and the Moon to slowly drift farther away.
This is a natural and well-documented geological process.
How fast is Earth slowing down?
Very slowly.
The length of a day increases by about 1.7 milliseconds per century. Thatโs millisecondsโnot minutes or hours.
Because Earthโs rotation is not perfectly consistent, scientists sometimes add leap seconds to atomic clocks to keep timekeeping aligned with Earthโs actual rotation.
So when will days become 25 hours long?
Not anytime soon.
Based on current scientific estimates, it would take around 200 million years for Earthโs day to reach about 25 hoursโassuming no major changes in planetary conditions.
There is no specific date when Earth will suddenly switch to 25-hour days, and there will be no abrupt change humans will notice.
Whatโs misleading about the viral claims?
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True: Earthโs rotation is slowing down.
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False or exaggerated: This will happen soon or within human timescales.
The slowdown is so gradual that it has no practical impact on daily life, calendars, or work schedules today.
Why this matters
Stories like this highlight how scientific facts can be distorted by headlines that prioritize shock over context.
Understanding the real timescales involved helps the public separate science from sensationalism, and appreciate how planetary processes unfold over millions of yearsโnot overnight.
For now, the 24-hour day is here to stay.
Earthโs days are getting longerโbut at a pace so slow that a 25-hour day is a concern for distant future civilizations, not for us.



