How many public holidays does Indonesia have in 2023?
Indonesia has 16 national holidays and 8 collective leave days in 2023, a total of 24 days off, per SKB 3 Menteri Nomor 1066 Tahun 2022, Nomor 3 Tahun 2022, and Nomor 3 Tahun 2022.
Indonesia has 16 national holidays in 2023, plus 8 collective leave days — 24 days off in total, per SKB 3 Menteri Nomor 1066 Tahun 2022, Nomor 3 Tahun 2022, and Nomor 3 Tahun 2022. The longest long weekend lasts 6 days on 21–26 April 2023.
No holidays this month.
No holidays this month.
Indonesia has 8 long-weekend periods in 2023 — runs of two or more consecutive work-free days formed by holidays and weekends. The longest lasts 6 days on 21–26 April 2023, covering Eid al-Fitr 1444 AH. Use the day-by-day breakdown of each period to plan trips and leave requests.
Throughout 2023, Indonesia has 16 national holidays and 8 collective leave days. The first holiday falls on 1 January (New Year's Day 2023) and the last on 25 December (Christmas Day).
| Date | Day | Holiday | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2023 | Sunday | New Year's Day 2023 | Holiday |
| 22 January 2023 | Sunday | Chinese New Year 2574 Kongzili | Holiday |
| 23 January 2023 | Monday | Chinese New Year 2574 Kongzili | Leave |
| 18 February 2023 | Saturday | Isra Mi'raj of the Prophet Muhammad | Holiday |
| 22 March 2023 | Wednesday | Nyepi (Balinese Saka New Year 1945) | Holiday |
| 23 March 2023 | Thursday | Nyepi (Balinese Saka New Year 1945) | Leave |
| 7 April 2023 | Friday | Good Friday | Holiday |
| 21 April 2023 | Friday | Eid al-Fitr 1444 AH | Leave |
| 22 April 2023 | Saturday | Eid al-Fitr 1444 AH | Holiday |
| 23 April 2023 | Sunday | Eid al-Fitr 1444 AH | Holiday |
| 24 April 2023 | Monday | Eid al-Fitr 1444 AH | Leave |
| 25 April 2023 | Tuesday | Eid al-Fitr 1444 AH | Leave |
| 26 April 2023 | Wednesday | Eid al-Fitr 1444 AH | Leave |
| 1 May 2023 | Monday | International Labor Day | Holiday |
| 18 May 2023 | Thursday | Ascension Day of Jesus Christ | Holiday |
| 1 June 2023 | Thursday | Pancasila Day | Holiday |
| 2 June 2023 | Friday | Vesak Day | Leave |
| 4 June 2023 | Sunday | Vesak Day 2567 BE | Holiday |
| 29 June 2023 | Thursday | Eid al-Adha 1444 AH | Holiday |
| 19 July 2023 | Wednesday | Islamic New Year 1445 AH | Holiday |
| 17 August 2023 | Thursday | Indonesian Independence Day | Holiday |
| 28 September 2023 | Thursday | Mawlid (Birthday of the Prophet Muhammad) | Holiday |
| 25 December 2023 | Monday | Christmas Day | Holiday |
| 26 December 2023 | Tuesday | Christmas Day | Leave |
Official source: SKB 3 Menteri Nomor 1066 Tahun 2022, Nomor 3 Tahun 2022, and Nomor 3 Tahun 2022 ("Hari Libur Nasional dan Cuti Bersama Tahun 2023", signed in Jakarta on 11 October 2022.). Compiled by CalendarWorld. National holidays and collective leave (cuti bersama) set by the SKB 3 Menteri joint ministerial decree. Collective leave is deducted from annual leave entitlement.
The Indonesia 2023 holiday data is available in open formats: JSON for applications, CSV for spreadsheets, and ICS for importing into Google Calendar, Apple Calendar, or Outlook.
Indonesia has 16 national holidays and 8 collective leave days in 2023, a total of 24 days off, per SKB 3 Menteri Nomor 1066 Tahun 2022, Nomor 3 Tahun 2022, and Nomor 3 Tahun 2022.
There are 8 long-weekend periods in Indonesia in 2023. The longest lasts 6 days on 21-26 April 2023, covering Eid al-Fitr 1444 AH.
The official source is SKB 3 Menteri Nomor 1066 Tahun 2022, Nomor 3 Tahun 2022, and Nomor 3 Tahun 2022 ("Hari Libur Nasional dan Cuti Bersama Tahun 2023", signed in Jakarta on 11 October 2022).
A national holiday is an official day off that applies to everyone, covering religious celebrations and national commemorations. Collective leave (cuti bersama) consists of extra days off set by the Indonesian government to bridge national holidays with weekends. Under the official decree, taking collective leave is deducted from the annual leave entitlement of employees and workers.
Each year the Indonesian government sets national holidays and collective leave through a joint decree (SKB) of the Minister of Religious Affairs, the Minister of Manpower, and the Minister of Administrative Reform. CalendarWorld carries the official data for 2020–2026, taken directly from each year's decree document, including amendment decrees whenever the government revises them.
Yes. The dates of 1 Ramadan, Eid al-Fitr, and Eid al-Adha follow the Minister of Religious Affairs' decision, usually confirmed through an isbat (moon-sighting) session shortly before the date — so the dates on this calendar can shift if a new decision is issued.