India holiday and festival scope
India does not have one simple nationwide “federal holiday” calendar equivalent to the U.S. federal list. Holidays vary by state, employer, bank, school, religion, and local practice.
This site currently uses a conservative planning calendar: India national holidays plus a curated list of major widely observed festivals/public holidays for 2026–2030.
Always included national holidays
- Republic Day — January 26
- Independence Day — August 15
- Gandhi Jayanti — October 2
Major holidays/festivals currently included when available
The curated table includes major dates such as New Year’s Day, Makar Sankranti/Pongal, Maha Shivratri, Holi, Eid al-Fitr, Ram Navami, Mahavir Jayanti, Good Friday, Ambedkar Jayanti, Labour Day, Eid al-Adha/Bakrid, Muharram, Janmashtami, Ganesh Chaturthi, Dussehra, Diwali, and Christmas Day.
Example: Muharram on Friday, June 26, 2026 is included in the current India major-holiday calendar. That means India mode treats it as a non-working day for planning. In real life, observance may be stronger in some northern regions and organizations than in parts of the south, so this may be conservative for some companies.
Current range
The curated festival table currently covers 2026–2030. Fixed national holidays can be projected indefinitely, but many Indian festival dates follow lunar, lunisolar, religious, and local observance rules. Muslim holidays can also depend on moon sighting/local announcement.
Recommended future improvement
- India national only — safest minimal calendar.
- India major holidays/festivals — current conservative planning mode.
- State-specific calendars — Delhi, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, etc.
- Custom company holidays — user-provided closures for precise business use.
For legal, HR, payroll, banking, or compliance deadlines, verify against official government, bank, court, or employer calendars.