Countries in which Easter Monday is a public holiday
Type
Christian
Date
Day after Easter Sunday
2025 date
April 21 (Western)
April 21 (Eastern)
2026 date
April 6 (Western)
April 13 (Eastern)
2027 date
March 29 (Western)
May 3 (Eastern)
2028 date
April 17 (Western)
April 17 (Eastern)
The celebration of Easter Monday Mass by Evangelical-Lutheran priests at Kungsholm Church, part of the Diocese of Stockholm in the Church of Sweden
Easter Monday in Portugal
Easter Monday is the second day of Eastertide and a public holiday in more than 50 predominantly Christian countries. In Western Christianity it marks the second day of the Octave of Easter; in Eastern Christianity it marks the second day of Bright Week.
Religious observances
Eastern Christianity
Main article: Bright Week
Blessing with holy water during an Eastern Orthodox Bright Week procession in Russia
In the Eastern Orthodox Church and Byzantine RiteCatholic Churches, this day is called "Bright Monday" or "Renewal Monday". The services, as in the rest of Bright Week, are quite different from during the rest of the year and are similar to the services on Pascha (Easter Sunday) and include an outdoor procession after the Divine Liturgy. While this is prescribed for all days of Bright Week, often they are only celebrated on Monday and maybe a couple of other days in parish churches, especially in non-Orthodox countries.
Should the calendar date for the feast day of a major saint (e.g. Saint George on April 23, or the patron saint of a church) or one's name day fall within Holy Week and Pascha itself, the feast is transferred to Easter Monday.[1][2]
Western Christianity
A lector does the first Scripture reading during the Mass of Easter Monday at Kungsholm Evangelical-Lutheran Church, part of the Diocese of Stockholm in Sweden (2026)
In Western Christianity, Easter Monday is the second day of Eastertide, as well as the second day in the Octave of Easter.[3]
In the Lutheran Churches, the Gospel for Easter Monday concerns the Road to Emmaus appearance.[3]
National observances
Australia
In Australia, Easter Monday is a public holiday.[4] Some people enjoy outdoor sporting events, such as the Oakbank Easter Racing Carnival in South Australia,[5] and the Stawell Gift in Victoria,[6] as well as a traditional AFL match between Geelong and Hawthorn at the MCG[7]. Since 2014, The NRL have held the Easter Monday match (NRL) between the Parramatta Eels and Wests Tigers match at Stadium Australia.
Austria
Main article: Emmausgang
In Austria and Southern Germany, there is the traditional "Emmausgang", commemorating the walk of the disciples to Emmaus, to which Jesus followed them without being recognized. Luke 24:13-35
Belarus
In Belarus, Easter Monday is generally not a public or official holiday, and most schools and businesses are open on this day, but is still celebrated by some people.
Canada
Easter Monday (French: Le Lundi de Pâques) is the Monday immediately following Easter Sunday and is a statutory holiday for federal employees. Although not mandatory by federal regulation, some employers also give this day off to employees out of common practice. Additionally, this holiday succeeds Good Friday (the Friday preceding Easter), a mandatory holiday for all employees, giving those workers an extra-long weekend in March or April. An exception to this rule is in Quebec, where employers must give either Good Friday or Easter Monday off to employees. Easter Weekend is the first provincial holiday after New Year's Day in provinces where Family Day, Islander Day, or Louis Riel Day are not observed.
Central Europe
Main article: Śmigus-dyngus
Easter Monday in Poland
Easter eggs from the Czech Republic
Śmigus-dyngus (or lany poniedziałek, Polish for Wet Monday) is the name for Easter Monday in Poland and the diaspora. In the Czech Republic, it is called velikonoční pondělí, in Slovakia veľkonočný pondelok and in Hungary Vízbevető. All these Catholic countries (and some others) practice the unique ancient custom on this day.[8] Traditionally, boys and men pour a bucket of water or perfume on girls and women or spank their buttocks and legs with long thin twigs (pussy willow) or switches made from willow, birch or decorated tree branches. A legend says that it keeps women healthy, beautiful, and fertile during the whole next year.
Another related custom, unique to Poland, is that of sprinkling bowls (garce) of ashes on people or houses, celebrated a few weeks earlier at the "półpoście". This custom is almost forgotten, but still practiced in the area around the borders of Masuria and Masovia.
Egypt
Main article: Sham Ennessim
In Egypt, the ancient festival of Sham Ennessim (Egyptian Arabic: شم النسيم, literally meaning "smelling of the breeze") is celebrated by the Coptic Orthodox Church (i.e. Eastern) Easter Monday, though the festival dates back to Ancient Egypt times (about 2700 BC). It is an Egyptian national holiday. Traditional activities include painting eggshells of boiled eggs, taking meals outdoors, and eating boiled eggs, lettuce, fesikh (pickled mullet (fish)) with lemon and scallion.
Germany
In Germany, people go out into the fields early in the morning and hold Easter egg races.[9] For Roman Catholics, Easter Monday is a Holy Day of Obligation.[10]
Ghana
In Ghana, Easter Monday is considered a general public holiday to mark the Easter celebration. Two days are given as public holidays, Good Friday and the following Monday which is Easter Monday.[11]
Greece
In Greece, Easter Monday is an official public and non-working holiday. It is a mandatory holiday imposed by the law where most schools, government offices, banks, stores, and most private businesses are closed. It is generally considered a time to spend with family and for those who are returning from holiday travel.
Ireland
In Ireland it is a day of remembrance for the men and women who died in the Easter Rising, which began on Easter Monday 1916. Until 1966, there was a parade of veterans, past the headquarters of the Irish Republican Army at the General Post Office (GPO) on O'Connell Street, and a reading of the Proclamation of the Irish Republic.
Italy
Easter Monday in Longone Sabino, Italy
In Italy, Easter Monday is an official public holiday and is called “Lunedì dell'Angelo” (“Monday of the Angel”), “Lunedì in Albis” or more commonly “Pasquetta”. It is customary to hold a family picnic in the countryside or have barbecues with friends.
New Zealand
In New Zealand it is a National Public Holiday.[12] Schools often extend the weekend to the Tuesday to give students a 5-day break.[13]
Nigeria
in Nigeria, Easter Monday is celebrated. It is a public holiday, along with Good Friday[14][15]. In this period, therefore, Friday and Monday are public holdiays to mark the Easter celebration, after which people return to work and children to school. It is a highly commemorated day in Nigeria.
North Macedonia
In North Macedonia, Easter Monday is a official public holiday and is called Втор на Велигден (Vtor na Veligden), with many schools businesses closed on this day. It is a religious major observance for the Macedonian people who are Eastern Orthodox Christians.
Spain
Traditional Easter mona
In Spain, Easter Monday is an official public holiday in Catalonia, the Valencian Community, the Balearic Islands, Navarre, the Basque Country, Cantabria, the village of Galvez, and La Rioja.[16] In Catalonia, the Land of Valencia, and Murcia a feature of this day is a pastry called Easter mona.[17] It is usually given by godparents to their godchildren, and it is traditional for families or groups of friends to gather for a trip somewhere, like the countryside, to eat the mona.[18]
Netherlands
In the Netherlands, Easter Monday is an official public holiday.[19] Apart from church services in some locations in the Dutch Bible Belt, there are no widespread festivities or traditions (aside from visiting the "meubelboulevard") for the "Second Easter Day" ("Tweede Paasdag").
United States
Two children enjoy treats during the annual Easter egg roll at the White House lawn on Easter Monday, 1911
In the United States, Easter Monday is not a federal holiday[20] and there are few national observances apart from traditions such as the White House Easter egg roll.[21] On a local level, the day is informally observed in some areas, such as North Dakota and some cities in New York, Michigan, and Indiana. Easter Monday was a public holiday in North Carolina from 1935 to 1987 due to the early-20th-century tradition of state government workers taking the day off to attend the annual baseball game between North Carolina State College and Wake Forest College.[22][23][failed verification]Texas and Maryland schools often have holidays on Good Friday and Easter Monday. In some states and districts, public schools and universities close on Easter Monday, often as part of spring break.
Dyngus Day
Main article: Śmigus-dyngus
Traditionally Polish areas of the United States observe Easter Monday as Dyngus Day.[24][25] Dyngus Day celebrations are widespread and popular in Chicago; Cleveland;[26]Buffalo, New York; Wyandotte and Hamtramck in Michigan; South Bend and La Porte in Indiana; and Hanover, New Hampshire.
United Kingdom
Only England, Wales and Northern Ireland observe Easter Monday as a bank holiday, with many large retailers being closed.[27] It is not an official public holiday in Scotland, but might be locally observed, with large retailers being open; but with reduced opening hours.[28]
South Africa
In South Africa, Easter Monday is the last day of the holy weekend. It is known as Family Day and is a public holiday. After this day, people return to work and children to school, so it is a day of rest.[29][30]
Ukraine
In Ukraine, Easter Monday is celebrated. It is a public holiday. After this day, people return to work and children to school, so it is a day of rest.[31]
See also
Bright Week – Seven days beginning on Easter in Eastern Christianity
Octave of Easter – Western Christianity celebration
References
^"Part IV". www.holytrinitymission.org. Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
^
Тvпико́нъ сіесть уста́въ [The Typicon which is the Order], Moscow: Сvнодальная тvпографiя, 1907, p. 468 (Title here transliterated into Russian; actually in Church Slavonic)
^
Peeler, Tim (2 April 2013). The Easter Monday Baseball Game: North Carolina State and Wake Forest on the Diamond, 1899-1956. McFarland. ISBN978-0786474523.
April Arab American Heritage Month Confederate History Month
420
April Fools' Day
Arbor Day
Birthday of José de Diego (PR)
Confederate Memorial Day (AL, MS)
Days of Remembrance of the Victims of the Holocaust (week)
DNA Day
Earth Day
Emancipation Day (cultural)
Thomas Jefferson's Birthday (AL)
Lag B’Omer (religious)
Last Friday of Great Lent (religious)
National First Ladies Day
Pascua Florida (FL)
Patriots' Day (MA, ME)
Ridván (religious)
San Jacinto Day (TX)
Siblings Day
Walpurgis Night (religious)
Yom Ha'atzmaut (cultural, religious)
May Asian American and
Pacific Islander Heritage Month Jewish American Heritage Month Military Appreciation Month
Memorial Day (federal)
Mother's Day (36)
Cinco de Mayo
Ascension of Baháʼu'lláh (religious)
Ascension of Our Lord (religious)
Caliphate Day (religious)
Declaration of the Bab (religious)
Harvey Milk Day (CA)
International Workers' Day / May Day (CA, unofficial, proposed state)
Law Day (36)
Loyalty Day (36)
Malcolm X Day (CA, IL, proposed federal)
Military Spouse Day
National Day of Prayer (36)
National Day of Reason
National Defense Transportation Day (36)
National Maritime Day (36)
Peace Officers Memorial Day (36)
Pentecost (religious)
Shavuot (religious)
Truman Day (MO)
Vesak / Buddha's Birthday (religious)
June Pride Month
Juneteenth (federal, cultural)
Father's Day (36)
Bunker Hill Day (Suffolk County, MA)
Carolina Day (SC)
Don Young Day (AK)
Fast of the Holy Apostles (religious)
Flag Day (36, proposed federal)
Helen Keller Day (PA)
Honor America Days (3 weeks)
Jefferson Davis Day (AL, FL)
Kamehameha Day (HI)
Litha (religious)
Martyrdom of Guru Arjan Dev Sahib (religious)
Odunde Festival (Philadelphia, PA, cultural)
Senior Week (week)
Saint John's Day (PR, religious)
West Virginia Day (WV)
Women Veterans Day
July
Independence Day (federal)
Asalha Puja Day (religious)
Birthday of Don Luis Muñoz Rivera (PR)
Birthday of Dr. José Celso Barbosa (PR)
Emancipation Day in the U.S. Virgin Islands (VI, cultural)
Guru Purnima (religious)
Khordad Sal (religious)
Lā Hoʻihoʻi Ea (HI, unofficial, cultural)
Martyrdom of the Báb (religious)
Parents' Day (36)
Pioneer Day (UT)
Puerto Rico Constitution Day (PR)
July–August
Summer vacation
Tisha B'Av (religious)
August
American Family Day (AZ)
Barack Obama Day in Illinois (IL)
Bennington Battle Day (VT)
Dormition of the Theotokos (religious)
Eid-e-Ghadeer (religious)
Fast in Honor of the Holy Mother of Lord Jesus (religious)
Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary (religious)
Hawaii Admission Day / Statehood Day (HI)
Krishna Janmashtami (religious)
Lammas (religious)
Lyndon Baines Johnson Day (TX)
Naga Panchami (religious)
National Aviation Day (36)
Paryushana (religious)
Raksha Bandhan (religious)
Transfiguration of the Lord (religious)
Victory Day (RI)
Women's Equality Day (36)
September Prostate Cancer Awareness Month Childhood Cancer Awareness Month Gospel Music Heritage Month
Labor Day (federal)
Brazilian Day (NY, cultural)
California Admission Day (CA)
Carl Garner Federal Lands Cleanup Day (36)
Constitution Day and Citizenship Day (36)
Constitution Week
Defenders Day (MD)
Elevation of the Holy Cross (religious)
Feast of San Gennaro (NY, cultural, religious)
Ganesh Chaturthi (religious)
Gold Star Mother's Day (36)
His Holiness Sakya Trizin's Birthday (religious)
Mabon (religious)
National Grandparents Day (36)
National Payroll Week (week)
Nativity of Mary / Nativity of the Theotokos (religious)
Native American Day (proposed federal)
Patriot Day (36)
Von Steuben Day
September–October Hispanic Heritage Month
Chehlum Imam Hussain (religious)
Oktoberfest
Pitri Paksha (religious)
Rosh Hashanah / Feast of Trumpets (TX, NY, religious)
Shemini Atzeret (religious)
Simchat Torah (religious)
Vijaya Dashami (religious)
Yom Kippur / Day of Atonement (TX, NY, religious)
October Breast Cancer Awareness Month Disability Employment Awareness Month Italian-American Heritage and Culture Month Filipino American History Month LGBT History Month
Columbus Day (federal)
Halloween
Alaska Day (AK)
Child Health Day (36)
General Pulaski Memorial Day
German-American Day
Indigenous Peoples' Day
International Day of Non-Violence
Leif Erikson Day (36)
Missouri Day (MO)
Nanomonestotse (cultural)
National School Lunch Week (week)
Native American Day in South Dakota (SD)
Nevada Day (NV)
Spirit Day (cultural)
Sweetest Day
Sukkot / Feast of Tabernacles (religious, week)
Virgin Islands–Puerto Rico Friendship Day (PR, VI)
White Cane Safety Day (36)
October–November
Birth of the Báb (religious)
Birth of Baháʼu'lláh (religious)
Day of the Dead (VI)
Diwali (NY, religious)
Mawlid al-Nabi (religious)
November Native American Indian Heritage Month
Veterans Day (federal)
Thanksgiving (federal)
Ascension of ‘Abdu’l Baha (religious)
All Saints' Day (religious)
Beginning of the Nativity Fast (religious)
Beltane / Samhain (religious)
Barack Obama Day in Alabama (Perry County, AL)
D. Hamilton Jackson Day (VI)
Day after Thanksgiving (24)
Day of the Covenant (religious)
Discovery of Puerto Rico Day (PR)
Election Day (CA, DE, HI, KY, MT, NJ, NY, OH, PR, VA, WV, proposed federal)
Family Day (NV)
Friendsgiving
Guru Nanak Gurpurab (religious)
Hanukkah (religious)
Lā Kūʻokoʻa (HI, unofficial, cultural)
Martyrdom of Guru Tegh Bahadur (religious)
Native American Heritage Day (MD, WA, cultural)
Presentation of the Theotokos to the Temple (religious)
Trans Day of Remembrance (cultural)
Unthanksgiving Day (cultural)
December
Christmas (religious, federal)
New Year's Eve
Advent Sunday (religious)
Alabama Day (AL)
Birthday of Guru Gobind Singh Sahib (religious)
Bodhi Day (religious)
Chalica (religious)
Christmas Eve (KY, NC, SC, PR, VI)
Day after Christmas (KY, NC, SC, TX, VI)
Festivus
HumanLight
Hanukkah (religious, week)
Immaculate Conception (religious)
Indiana Day (IN)
Kwanzaa (cultural, week)
Milad Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin (religious)
National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day (36)
Nativity of Jesus (religious)
Old Year's Night (VI)
Pan American Aviation Day (36)
Pancha Ganapati (religious, week)
Rosa Parks Day (OH, OR)
Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God (religious)
Wright Brothers Day (36)
Yule (religious)
Zartosht No-Diso (religious)
Varies (year round)
Eid al-Adha (NY, religious)
Eid al-Fitr (NY, religious)
Islamic New Year (religious)
Yawm al-Arafa (religious)
Laylat al-Qadr (religious)
Navaratri (religious, four times a year)
Obon (religious)
Onam (religious)
Ramadan (religious, month)
Ghost Festival (religious)
Yawm Aashura (religious)
Legend:
(federal) = federal holidays, (abbreviation) = state/territorial holidays, (religious) = religious holidays, (cultural) = holiday related to a specific racial/ethnic group or sexual minority, (week) = week-long holidays, (month) = month-long holidays, (36) = Title 36 Observances and Ceremonies
See also: Lists of holidays, Hallmark holidays, Public holidays in the United States, Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands.