This game is currently in Beta. Content may change with updates.

Where Seasons Pass Season Timer

Live season countdown for Where Seasons Pass on Roblox. Track the weekly Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter cycle from the beta reference date. Updated July 2026.

In Where Seasons Pass on Roblox, time is literally money. Each of the four outdoor seasons—Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter—lasts exactly one real-world week before the game advances to the next. Crops that flourish in Summer wither if you try to grow them in Winter, quest givers rotate their requests with the calendar, and cosmetic shop rotations often align with seasonal boundaries. Missing a transition by even a day can mean planting the wrong seed or failing a timed quest chain. The Season Timer on this page exists to give you a precise, always-on countdown so you never farm on guesswork again.

How the Weekly Cycle Works

The beta uses a fixed seven-day season length shared by all public servers. When one week ends, every player's farm simultaneously enters the next season regardless of when they joined. That means the community shares a single global clock—a design choice that encourages players to coordinate strategies, compare harvest notes, and prepare for the same deadlines.

Our interactive timer anchors to an official beta reference point: the season that began at reset on the documented launch-week Monday in the July 2026 calendar. From that anchor, the tool calculates which season is active right now and how many days, hours, and minutes remain until the next rollover. It then projects forward through the full Spring → Summer → Autumn → Winter loop so you can see dates for several weeks ahead without opening the Roblox client.

What the Interactive Widget Shows You

When you load this page, the Season Timer widget displays four key pieces of information at a glance. First, a bold label for the current season with a color-coded badge matching in-game UI tones. Second, a live countdown to the next season change, updating every second. Third, a progress bar showing how far through the current week you are—useful for deciding whether a medium-growth crop like Tulip still has time to mature. Fourth, a forward calendar listing the start and end dates of upcoming seasons for the next eight to twelve weeks.

You can optionally adjust a timezone offset so countdowns match your local evening play sessions. The widget does not connect to Roblox servers; it applies the same published weekly formula the community verified against in-game HUD text during beta testing. If developers ever change season length in a patch, we update the reference constants and note the change on our Latest Updates page.

Planning Uses for the Countdown

Experienced farmers consult the timer before every planting session. If the countdown shows less than forty-eight hours remain in Summer, most players skip new Watermelon beds and instead plant fast crops like Tomato or Strawberry to squeeze out final quest progress. Conversely, when a season just started, slow crops with huge payouts—Pumpkin in Autumn, Sweet Potato late in the same season—become viable because the full growth window is available.

The timer also helps you schedule real-life playtime. Knowing that Autumn begins on a specific Tuesday lets you block an extra hour that evening to clear land, buy seeds, and accept new Autumn Quests before leaderboard-focused friends pull ahead. Pair the countdown with our Crop Planner to pre-select seeds for the upcoming week while you still have crops to harvest in the current one.

Season Transition Checklist

Use this routine each time the countdown hits zero. Log in shortly after reset to check which quest NPCs refreshed. Review your field layout and uproot or harvest crops that will not survive the new season unless protected by a greenhouse. Open the All Crops index filtered to the new season and compare profit tiers. Redeem any codes that grant season-specific boosts before they expire. Finally, note clover purchases in the Clover Tracker if you buy limited-time decorations tied to the season that just ended.

For a narrative explanation of why the cycle matters—including how greenhouse slots bypass outdoor weather—read the Season Cycle Explained guide. New players should also review the Beginner Guide for basic planting controls before relying on advanced timing tricks.

Limitations and Accuracy

This timer reflects the publicly documented weekly schedule as of July 2026. Private servers, unreleased test branches, or future developer changes could diverge temporarily. Always confirm odd behavior against the in-game season banner if a major patch drops. We do not scrape Roblox accounts or read your save data; accuracy comes from community-verified reset times and patch notes, not from live API access.

Because seasons are global, the timer is equally useful on PC, mobile, and console browser sessions. Bookmark this page, add it to your home screen, or keep a tab pinned while you play. When the countdown reaches zero, you will know the rest of the Where Seasons Pass Roblox community is stepping into the same new season alongside you—ready to plant, quest, and compete on equal footing.

Current Season

spring
summer
autumn
winter

Next season change in: --

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is each season in Where Seasons Pass on Roblox?
Each outdoor season lasts seven real-world days. After Winter ends, the cycle returns to Spring automatically.
What reference point does the July 2026 timer use?
The countdown anchors to the documented beta launch-week season reset. From that Monday reset, every subsequent season is calculated in strict seven-day blocks.
Will slow crops finish before the season ends?
Compare a crop growth time from our crop pages against the timer progress bar. If less than half the week remains, favor fast crops unless you use greenhouse protection.
Does daylight saving time affect the countdown?
Season resets follow a fixed UTC-based schedule. Use the timezone selector on the widget to display countdowns in your local time.
Do greenhouses follow the same season timer?
Outdoor fields change with the global season. Greenhouse tropical plots follow separate rules—see our greenhouse guide for crop exceptions.
What should I do when the timer hits zero?
Harvest viable crops, accept new seasonal quests, replant using the Crop Planner, and check the updates page for any patch notes tied to the reset.

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