Why Do Public Holiday Dates Change Every Year?

Public holidays shift when tied to lunar calendars, Easter rules, or weekday formulas. See fixed and moving dates on country year calendars at HolidayCalendar.org.

Many people first notice the pattern when comparing two years side by side: Good Friday moves, Thanksgiving Day stays on the same weekday, and Christmas Day stays on 25 December. Public holiday dates change when the rule behind the holiday depends on the moon, a religious calculation, or a weekday formula instead of a fixed civil date.

Understanding those rules helps travelers, payroll teams, and school administrators avoid hard-coding dates that will be wrong next year. Country year calendars on HolidayCalendar.org list the resolved dates for each territory so you do not have to recalculate them manually.

Fixed-date holidays

Fixed-date holidays use the same month and day every year in the civil (Gregorian) calendar used for most official scheduling worldwide.

Common examples:

Fixed dates are easy to remember but not immune to adjustment. When a fixed holiday falls on a weekend, some countries publish a substitute or observed public holiday on the nearest weekday. Independence Day in the United States sometimes appears on 3 July or 5 July in calendar data when 4 July falls on a Saturday or Sunday. Always read the year listing for the country you care about.

Open any country hub, choose a year, and scan the table for dates that repeat annually unless a substitute rule applies.

Lunar calendar holidays

A large share of moving holidays follows lunar or lunisolar calendars. Months begin on a new moon or on rules tied to moon phases, so the matching Gregorian date shifts each year.

Examples often cited in global planning guides include:

  • Lunar New Year (date varies; celebrated in several countries under different official names)
  • Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha (Islamic calendar months are lunar; Gregorian dates move forward roughly 11 days each year)
  • Diwali and other festivals tied to Hindu lunisolar calendars

The civil calendar used for airport schedules and corporate fiscal years does not line up with lunar months. Governments and religious authorities announce the converted Gregorian dates for each year. That is why two consecutive years rarely share the same Eid or Diwali date on a wall calendar.

On HolidayCalendar.org, search the relevant country year page rather than copying last year's spreadsheet. Entries such as Eid ul-Fitr in Bangladesh show the resolved date for that dataset year.

Solar vs lunar scheduling

The Gregorian calendar is solar-oriented: it aligns with the seasons over long periods. Lunar calendars track moon cycles and drift relative to seasons unless corrected (lunisolar systems add intercalary months). Holiday planners feel that drift as "the date moved again this year."

Religious calculation holidays

Some Christian holidays depend on Easter, which is calculated from a combination of astronomical events and church rules rather than a single fixed civil date.

Good Friday and Easter Monday move with Easter Sunday. In 2026, Good Friday falls on 3 April for the United Kingdom listing; another year will place it elsewhere in March or April. Teams that hard-code April dates without checking the year risk scheduling errors.

Other traditions use similar calculated rules:

  • Jewish holidays follow the Hebrew calendar
  • Some Orthodox celebrations use revised Julian calendar rules in certain jurisdictions

You do not need to master every formula. You need a trusted year calendar for each country where you operate. Entity pages such as Easter Monday show multiple occurrences across years when available.

Weekday-based holidays

Another family of holidays is defined by weekday position in a month:

  • Thanksgiving Day in the United States is the fourth Thursday in November (2026 listing)
  • Mother's Day in many countries is the second Sunday in May (often tracked as an observance rather than a public holiday)
  • Memorial Day in the United States is the last Monday in May
  • Labour Day in the United States is the first Monday in September

The holiday "moves" on the calendar grid but keeps a stable rule. Planners learn the rule once and still verify the exact date annually because month layouts change.

Bank holidays in the United Kingdom often use Monday anchors as well, such as Early May Bank Holiday. See what is a bank holiday for how that label differs from "public holiday" in everyday speech.

Why governments publish holiday calendars early

Countries, states, and employers release official holiday schedules months or years ahead because downstream systems depend on them.

Business planning: factories, retailers, and logistics firms staff around peak travel weeks. A shifted Easter or Eid changes warehouse rosters and customer service coverage.

Travel planning: airlines and hotels price demand around known long weekends. Substitute holiday rules affect bridge-day traffic.

Workforce scheduling: payroll, time-and-attendance software, and union agreements reference published lists. Moving a statutory date without updating systems creates overtime disputes.

Early publication does not always mean every date is final on day one. Lunar and religious dates may be confirmed closer to the event. Re-check the authoritative year page when announcements update.

How holiday calendars track changing dates

A practical holiday calendar stores three layers:

  1. Country scope (which jurisdiction's rules apply)
  2. Year scope (which civil year you are viewing)
  3. Resolved dates (the outcome after lunar conversion, Easter tables, weekday rules, and substitute-day policies)

HolidayCalendar.org follows that structure:

This model beats memorizing formulas because it mirrors how governments publish lists. It also separates public holidays from observances, which may use typical annual dates without legal closure. Read public holidays vs observances if your team mixes both lists.

For printing and wall planning, printable country calendars reuse the same year resolution without maintaining a private spreadsheet.

Frequently asked questions

Do all countries use the same rules for moving holidays?

No. Easter-related public holidays appear in some countries but not others. Lunar holidays depend on national moon-sighting policy or published tables. Always use the target country's year list.

Why does my calendar app show a different date than my employer?

Apps may use generic ICS feeds, home-region defaults, or outdated rule sets. Confirm against the official listing for the work location and year.

Are observance dates as volatile as public holidays?

Some observances use fixed typical dates; others move with lunar calendars. Observances still may not imply paid time off. Check the observance entity and any related country holiday page separately.

How far ahead can I rely on published dates?

Fixed civil dates are stable year to year except substitute rules. Lunar and some religious dates should be reconfirmed for each year even if provisional dates appear early.

Where should global teams start on HolidayCalendar.org?

Pick each operating country on holidays, open the relevant year, and bookmark entity pages for holidays that move every year (Easter, Eid, lunar new year festivals, Monday bank holidays).

Conclusion

Public holiday dates change because governments combine civil dates, lunar conversions, religious tables, weekday formulas, and weekend substitute policies. Fixed holidays are the easy part; moving holidays are where calendars, payroll, and travel plans usually break.

HolidayCalendar.org publishes country year calendars and holiday entity pages so you can read resolved dates instead of re-deriving rules. Start from holidays by country, select the year you need, and refresh those listings whenever lunar or religious authorities issue updates.

Explore international observances

Browse curated world days, open the year listing, or read observance detail pages on HolidayCalendar.org.

Related guides

  • Public Holidays vs Observances: What's the Difference?

    Learn how public holidays and observances differ in legal status, closures, and planning. Use country and observance calendars on HolidayCalendar.org.

  • What Is a Bank Holiday?

    Bank holidays began as banking closure days but now shape work, payroll, and travel schedules. Compare UK, Ireland, and Australia listings on HolidayCalendar.org.