How many public holidays does India have in 2026?
India has 17 gazetted holidays in 2026, per DoPT Office Memorandum of 3 July 2025 — Holidays to be observed in Central Government Offices during the year 2026.
India has 17 gazetted holidays in 2026, per DoPT Office Memorandum of 3 July 2025 — Holidays to be observed in Central Government Offices during the year 2026. The longest long weekend lasts 3 days on 24–26 January 2026.
No holidays this month.
No holidays this month.
India has 10 long-weekend periods in 2026 — runs of two or more consecutive work-free days formed by holidays and weekends. The longest lasts 3 days on 24–26 January 2026, covering Republic Day. Use the day-by-day breakdown of each period to plan trips and leave requests.
Throughout 2026, India has 17 gazetted holidays. The first holiday falls on 26 January (Republic Day) and the last on 25 December (Christmas Day).
| Date | Day | Holiday | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January 2026 | Monday | Republic Day | Holiday |
| 4 March 2026 | Wednesday | Holi | Holiday |
| 21 March 2026 | Saturday | Eid-ul-Fitr | Holiday |
| 26 March 2026 | Thursday | Ram Navami | Holiday |
| 31 March 2026 | Tuesday | Mahavir Jayanti | Holiday |
| 3 April 2026 | Friday | Good Friday | Holiday |
| 1 May 2026 | Friday | Buddha Purnima | Holiday |
| 27 May 2026 | Wednesday | Eid-ul-Zuha (Bakrid) | Holiday |
| 26 June 2026 | Friday | Muharram | Holiday |
| 15 August 2026 | Saturday | Independence Day | Holiday |
| 26 August 2026 | Wednesday | Milad-un-Nabi (Id-e-Milad) | Holiday |
| 4 September 2026 | Friday | Janmashtami | Holiday |
| 2 October 2026 | Friday | Mahatma Gandhi's Birthday | Holiday |
| 20 October 2026 | Tuesday | Dussehra (Vijaya Dashami) | Holiday |
| 8 November 2026 | Sunday | Diwali (Deepavali) | Holiday |
| 24 November 2026 | Tuesday | Guru Nanak's Birthday | Holiday |
| 25 December 2026 | Friday | Christmas Day | Holiday |
Official source: DoPT Office Memorandum of 3 July 2025 — Holidays to be observed in Central Government Offices during the year 2026 (The 17 gazetted (closed) holidays for central government offices in Delhi/New Delhi. Republic Day, Independence Day, and Gandhi Jayanti are the three national holidays. Islamic holiday dates are subject to moon sighting — Eid-ul-Zuha was observed on 28 May in most states; the list keeps the official 27 May date. States publish their own holiday lists.). Compiled by CalendarWorld. The 17 gazetted (closed) holidays for central government offices in Delhi, per the DoPT's annual office memorandum. Republic Day, Independence Day, and Gandhi Jayanti are the three national holidays. Islamic holiday dates are subject to moon sighting; each state publishes its own holiday list.
The India 2026 holiday data is available in open formats: JSON for applications, CSV for spreadsheets, and ICS for importing into Google Calendar, Apple Calendar, or Outlook.
India has 17 gazetted holidays in 2026, per DoPT Office Memorandum of 3 July 2025 — Holidays to be observed in Central Government Offices during the year 2026.
There are 10 long-weekend periods in India in 2026. The longest lasts 3 days on 24-26 January 2026, covering Republic Day.
The official source is DoPT Office Memorandum of 3 July 2025 — Holidays to be observed in Central Government Offices during the year 2026 (The 17 gazetted (closed) holidays for central government offices in Delhi/New Delhi. Republic Day, Independence Day, and Gandhi Jayanti are the three national holidays. Islamic holiday dates are subject to moon sighting — Eid-ul-Zuha was observed on 28 May in most states; the list keeps the official 27 May date. States publish their own holiday lists).
Only Republic Day (26 January), Independence Day (15 August), and Gandhi Jayanti (2 October) are national holidays observed everywhere. The other gazetted holidays close central government offices, with three of them chosen locally by each region's welfare committee. Restricted holidays form a separate optional list from which each central government employee may pick two; state governments and private employers set their own calendars.
Yes. The official list itself notes that Eid-ul-Fitr, Eid-ul-Zuha, Muharram, and Milad-un-Nabi depend on moon sighting. In 2026, Eid-ul-Zuha was gazetted for 27 May but observed on 28 May in most states after the crescent was not sighted; this calendar keeps the official gazetted date.