What this guide helps you do
- See where the day is shortest or longest in your shortlist
- Understand how sunrise and sunset changes affect the total day
- Use region hubs to compare nearby cities efficiently
Daylight-length pages help users compare destinations, seasons, and routines at a glance. They are also strong discovery pages because they naturally lead into multiple city clicks.
These pages are strong entry points when you want a fast answer and clear internal links after it.
This is the first guide block designed to be cited on its own, not just used as a click-through bridge.
| City | Sunrise | Sunset | Daylight | 30-day shift |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stockholm Sweden | 4:40 AM | 8:50 PM | 16h 10m | 122 min longer over the next 30 days |
| Oslo Norway | 5:06 AM | 9:23 PM | 16h 17m | 127 min longer over the next 30 days |
| Melbourne Australia | 7:05 AM | 5:30 PM | 10h 25m | 44 min shorter over the next 30 days |
| Vancouver Canada | 5:46 AM | 8:34 PM | 14h 47m | 74 min longer over the next 30 days |
| Cape Town South Africa | 7:25 AM | 6:03 PM | 10h 38m | 38 min shorter over the next 30 days |
| Tokyo Japan | 4:47 AM | 6:31 PM | 13h 44m | 43 min longer over the next 30 days |
Short conclusions make the guide easier to cite without forcing people to parse the whole table first.
Oslo leads this set with 16h 17m.
Stockholm starts earliest at 4:40 AM.
Oslo shifts the most, with 127 min longer over the next 30 days.
This guide becomes more useful when people can validate the numbers and reuse them in their own workflow.
Use region pages when you need multiple nearby cities without repeating the search flow.
Each guide solves a different starting intent, but they all lead into the same city pages.