There are four countries that are in at least nine time zones, but most of them consist of territories spread out over a large area. Russia has the most time zones in one contiguous area (ten).
Countries in at least nine time zones:
France
Russia
Russia has eleven time zones, making it the country with the most time zones in the world. This is due to its vast geographical size spanning multiple longitudes.
Russia spans across 11 time zones and two continents, Europe and Asia.
China has five time zones but maintains the same time throughout the country by using a single time zone, Beijing Time (GMT+8), across the entire nation.
Russia. There is a 9-hour difference between local time in the far west of the country (Kaliningrad, UTC+3) and the far east (Magadan, UTC+12).Since 2010, however, the country has been divided into nine time zones -- and not the ten that the above information might imply -- as there is a two-hour local-time difference between the adjacent Moscow (UTC+4) and Yekaterinburg (UTC+6) zones.
Zimbabwe has one time zone, which is Central Africa Time (CAT), which is 2 hours ahead of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC+2).
Each country chooses its own time zone(s), and 39 is the total number of different time zones that all of the world's national governments have chosen.
France a country in Europe covers around 12 time zones which is the maximum time zone a country has USA is second covering 11 time zones then its Russia having 9
Russia is considered to be the Earth's largest country. Due to its size, it actually encompasses nine time zones.
It is a huge country. The U.S. has 4 time zones.
Russia has eleven time zones, making it the country with the most time zones in the world. This is due to its vast geographical size spanning multiple longitudes.
Russia spans across 11 time zones and two continents, Europe and Asia.
russia- 11 time zones hope this helps!
Russia
The United States has states in six or seven time zones (depending on the time of the year), territories in two or three additional time zones, and controls uninhabited islands in two other time zones. The total is, therefore, eleven time zones, including nine with inhabited lands.
Russia is so immense it crosses 9 time zones (formally 11 zones).
The first country to adopt a standard time was the Netherlands in 1835.
Asia