State:

National
The federal government has designated certain days as “national holidays.” Federal government offices and national banks close their offices in observance of national holidays (5 USCA Sec. 6103).
Most states observe the same holidays as those observed by the federal government. There are variations, however.
Please see the state Holidays section.
National holidays. Days designated as holidays by the federal government are:
HolidayObserved
New Year's DayJanuary 1
Birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr.Third Monday in January
Washington's BirthdayThird Monday in February
Memorial DayLast Monday in May
JuneteenthJune 19
Independence DayJuly 4
Labor DayFirst Monday in September
Columbus DaySecond Monday in October
Veterans DayNovember 11
Thanksgiving DayFourth Thursday in November
Christmas DayDecember 25
Federal holidays will be observed on Friday if they occur on a Saturday and on Monday if they occur on a Sunday.
The federal holiday on the third Monday in February is known as Washington's Birthday, but the day is celebrated by some as Presidents Day.
Inauguration Day. January 20th every 4 years is a legal holiday for federal employees employed in the District of Columbia, Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties in Maryland, Arlington and Fairfax Counties in Virginia, and the cities of Alexandria and Falls Church in Virginia. When January 20 of any fourth year falls on Sunday, the next succeeding day selected for the public observance of the inauguration of the President is a legal public holiday.
Private employers are not required to observe national holidays, except for banks that follow the closing schedule of the Federal Reserve Board. Granting paid time off for holidays in private employment is more a matter of custom and union contract negotiation than law.
Private employers almost universally observe six holidays. The “standard six” are New Year's Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day. After the standard six, the Friday after Thanksgiving, Good Friday, and Presidents Day are the next most commonly observed holidays across the nation. However, employers have discretion when it comes to determining whether to grant holidays and, if so, which days to observe.
It is important for employers to be sensitive to an individual employee’s religious obligations regarding holiday observances. Employers should accommodate an employee’s request for time off for a holiday observance if the accommodation does not require more than a de minimis cost or burden to business operations (i.e., does not create an undue hardship).
Some courts have ruled that requiring employees to take paid or unpaid leave on days they wish to observe as personal religious holidays meets the test of reasonable accommodation. Many employers grant all employees one or two paid personal days or floating holidays each year for this purpose.
For many in America, the holiday season is the annual splurge of parties, celebrations, and consumption that spans from Halloween to New Year's Day. Somewhere between the candy, turkey, and champagne, most workplaces stop to observe Christmas. But Christians aren't the only ones with sacred holidays during the holiday season.
Buddhist
Bodhi Day. On December 8, Buddhists celebrate Bodhi Day to commemorate the day Buddha attained enlightenment under the Bodhi tree. To the Buddhist, it is a day of remembrance and meditation, much like the Christian celebration of the birth of Jesus on December 25.
Vesak (Budhha Day). Celebrated every year on the full moon in May, this is the most significant Buddhist holiday. Theravada Buddhists commonly celebrate this day of the year on which (in different years) the Buddha was born, attained full awakening (enlightenment), and died over 2,500 years ago.
Jewish
Hanukkah. Hanukkah, “The Festival of Lights,” is an 8-day holiday that celebrates when the Jews regained control of Jerusalem and rededicated the temple after its desecration by the forces of the king of Syria. According to Jewish law and custom, the primary ritual of Hanukkah is the lighting of candles each night, so employees may want to leave early so that they can be home to light the candles at nightfall. The dates of Hanukkah are determined by the Hebrew calendar and can fall anywhere from late November to late December.
Passover. A major Jewish festival lasting seven days commemorating the Exodus of Jews from slavery in Egypt. The ritual observance of this holiday centers upon a home service called the seder (meaning “order”) and a festive meal.
Rosh HaShanah. The Jewish New Year, which marks the beginning of a 10-day period of prayer, self-examination, and repentance known as the High Holy Days ending with Yom Kippur.
Yom Kippur. The holiest day on the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur means “Day of Atonement” and refers to the annual observance of fasting, prayer, and repentance. Absence from work or school is common. We recommend avoiding planning major events, assignments, or exams during the 15 hours of Yom Kippur beginning and ending at sundown.
African American/Pan-African
Kwanzaa. In 1966, Kwanzaa was created by author, political activist, and college professor Maulana Karenga as the first specifically African-American holiday. It is observed from December 26 to January 1 as a "celebration of family, community, and culture.”
Muslim
Ashura and Eid al-Adha. For Muslims, Ashura commemorates the day Nuh (Noah) left the Ark and the day that Musa (Moses) was saved from the Egyptians by Allah, and the martyrdom of Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammed. It is a day of fasting for Sunni Muslims.
Muslims celebrate Eid al-Adha, the "Festival of Sacrifice" or "Greater Eid," in commemoration of Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son Ishmael as an act of obedience to God. As part of the holiday, men, women, and children are expected to dress in their finest clothing and join a large congregation in an open area or mosque for prayer.
Although Eid al-Adha is always on the same day of the Islamic calendar, the date on the Gregorian calendar (also known as the western or Christian calendar) varies from year to year since it is a solar calendar and the Islamic calendar is a lunar calendar. Furthermore, Eid al-Adha falls on one of two different Gregorian dates in different parts of the world because the boundary of crescent visibility is different from the international date line. It should be noted that in the Muslim calendar, a holiday begins at sunset on the previous day.
‘Eid al-Fitr. This day marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan and the first day of the month of Shawwal. This is a day of celebration that begins with a special ‘Eid prayer and involves day-long festivities involving food and sweets. Celebrations may last up to three days. The date of ‘Eid may vary depending on the sighting of the new moon.
Ramadan. Ramadan is the holiest month of the Islamic calendar and falls in the 9th month for a period of 28 to 30 days. During this month, Muslims fast from food and drink from dawn to sundown. Muslims use this time to focus on prayer, reading the Qur’an, and increasing their spirituality and relationship with God. The last 10 nights are considered the holiest days of the year. The beginning and end dates of Ramadan may vary depending on the sighting of the new moon.
Christian
Christmas. Observed on December 25th commemorating the birth of Jesus.
Easter. Holiday celebrating the resurrection of Jesus from the dead.
Good/Holy Friday. A day commemorating the crucifixion and death of Jesus.
Hindu
Diwali. A fall festival of lights signifying the victory of light over darkness, knowledge over ignorance, and hope over despair. Rituals of lighting candles and other forms of light extend over a five-day period, with the primary celebrations on the first night.
Employers are required to reasonably accommodate religious practices unless accommodation would cause an undue hardship on the conduct of business. Please see the national Religious Discrimination section.
A potentially difficult issue for employers during the holidays is whether to allow employees to decorate their work spaces with religious symbols and whether the company itself should decorate. Employees don't have an absolute right to engage in religious speech and expression in the workplace. Employers may establish reasonable restrictions on their manner of religious speech or expression in the workplace. If employees generally are allowed to decorate their work spaces with pictures and other items, a prohibition on decorations that are religious might be considered discriminatory. Also, one religion should not be favored over another. If one employee is allowed to put up Christmas decorations, another one shouldn't be banned from putting up Kwanzaa decorations.
There is a distinction between allowing employees to decorate their personal work spaces and the company decorating the office. An employer should not be seen as promoting one religion over another or endorsing religion generally. Accordingly, decorations should stick to a general holiday theme rather than focusing on Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, and so on. The more one specific group is recognized, the greater the chance of offending someone who has been left out. It's best to keep decorations as nonspecific and neutral as possible. The same considerations apply to the office holiday party.
Generic decorations to put the office in the holiday mood can include:
• Gingerbread houses,
• Snowflakes,
• Snowmen, and
• Candy canes.
In recent years, many employers have begun using a bank of “floating” holidays in full or partial replacement of a system of company-designated holidays. Floating holidays are days that the employee can self-designate as holidays in order to take a day off. Employees may use floating holidays to observe a religious holiday, create a long weekend when a company-recognized holiday falls on a Thursday, take a day off on their birthday, etc.
Some companies use a combination of designated and floating holidays, and a small but growing group of employers use floating holidays exclusively. If your company employs a floating holiday system, you may wish to implement specific rules and procedures that provide for ample notice to the employer when an employee chooses to designate a floating holiday. This will help to avoid work disruption and minimize the possibility that the floating holidays will be used instead as a backup bank of sick and personal days.
The federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) requires that covered employers pay nonexempt employees 11/2 times their regular rate for all hours worked in excess of 40 in a workweek. Because time off for holidays is not “hours worked,” holiday time is excluded from the overtime calculation. (However, although they are under no statutory obligation to do so, some employers choose to include holiday time off in the overtime calculation.)
Similarly, the FLSA does not require employers to pay time-and-a-half to employees who work on designated holidays unless that time exceeds 40 hours in the workweek.
Illustration. An employee works 9 hours a day Monday through Thursday for a total of 36 hours. Friday is a holiday, and the employee has the day off. Under an established policy, the company pays the employee for 8 hours on holidays, and the regular workweek runs Sunday through Saturday. Although the employee will be paid for 44 hours, he or she worked only 36 hours. The employee is entitled only to straight time for all 44 hours.
However, the employee would have been entitled to 4 hours of overtime if the employee had actually worked 8 hours on the Friday. Overtime pay is due not because Friday was a holiday, but because the hours worked on that day put the employee over the 40-hour mark.
Holiday premium. Although they are under no statutory obligation to do so, many companies pay employees their regular pay plus a premium when they work on a scheduled holiday. Under the FLSA, holiday premiums need not be considered in calculating the employee's “regular rate” for overtime purposes. In addition, holiday premiums may be used to offset overtime pay due under the FLSA.
The FLSA isn't the only federal law that can interact with holidays. There is information on how to handle holidays that fall during an employee's Family and Medical Leave Act leave. Please see the national Leave of Absence section.
Many companies require employees to complete an initial 30- to 90-day period before they are eligible to receive pay for holiday time off. To prevent absenteeism near holidays, some employers require employees to work the last workday before and the first workday after a holiday in order to receive pay for the holiday. Many companies pay part-time and temporary employees for holiday time off. Usually the amount of compensation for part-time workers is prorated on basis of the number of hours the employee regularly works.
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Last reviewed on October 10, 2024.
Related Topics:
National
The federal government has designated certain days as “national holidays.” Federal government offices and national banks close their offices in observance of national holidays (5 USCA Sec. 6103).
Most states observe the same holidays as those observed by the federal government. There are variations, however.
Please see the state Holidays section.
National holidays. Days designated as holidays by the federal government are:
HolidayObserved
New Year's DayJanuary 1
Birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr.Third Monday in January
Washington's BirthdayThird Monday in February
Memorial DayLast Monday in May
JuneteenthJune 19
Independence DayJuly 4
Labor DayFirst Monday in September
Columbus DaySecond Monday in October
Veterans DayNovember 11
Thanksgiving DayFourth Thursday in November
Christmas DayDecember 25
Federal holidays will be observed on Friday if they occur on a Saturday and on Monday if they occur on a Sunday.
The federal holiday on the third Monday in February is known as Washington's Birthday, but the day is celebrated by some as Presidents Day.
Inauguration Day. January 20th every 4 years is a legal holiday for federal employees employed in the District of Columbia, Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties in Maryland, Arlington and Fairfax Counties in Virginia, and the cities of Alexandria and Falls Church in Virginia. When January 20 of any fourth year falls on Sunday, the next succeeding day selected for the public observance of the inauguration of the President is a legal public holiday.
Private employers are not required to observe national holidays, except for banks that follow the closing schedule of the Federal Reserve Board. Granting paid time off for holidays in private employment is more a matter of custom and union contract negotiation than law.
Private employers almost universally observe six holidays. The “standard six” are New Year's Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day. After the standard six, the Friday after Thanksgiving, Good Friday, and Presidents Day are the next most commonly observed holidays across the nation. However, employers have discretion when it comes to determining whether to grant holidays and, if so, which days to observe.
It is important for employers to be sensitive to an individual employee’s religious obligations regarding holiday observances. Employers should accommodate an employee’s request for time off for a holiday observance if the accommodation does not require more than a de minimis cost or burden to business operations (i.e., does not create an undue hardship).
Some courts have ruled that requiring employees to take paid or unpaid leave on days they wish to observe as personal religious holidays meets the test of reasonable accommodation. Many employers grant all employees one or two paid personal days or floating holidays each year for this purpose.
For many in America, the holiday season is the annual splurge of parties, celebrations, and consumption that spans from Halloween to New Year's Day. Somewhere between the candy, turkey, and champagne, most workplaces stop to observe Christmas. But Christians aren't the only ones with sacred holidays during the holiday season.
Buddhist
Bodhi Day. On December 8, Buddhists celebrate Bodhi Day to commemorate the day Buddha attained enlightenment under the Bodhi tree. To the Buddhist, it is a day of remembrance and meditation, much like the Christian celebration of the birth of Jesus on December 25.
Vesak (Budhha Day). Celebrated every year on the full moon in May, this is the most significant Buddhist holiday. Theravada Buddhists commonly celebrate this day of the year on which (in different years) the Buddha was born, attained full awakening (enlightenment), and died over 2,500 years ago.
Jewish
Hanukkah. Hanukkah, “The Festival of Lights,” is an 8-day holiday that celebrates when the Jews regained control of Jerusalem and rededicated the temple after its desecration by the forces of the king of Syria. According to Jewish law and custom, the primary ritual of Hanukkah is the lighting of candles each night, so employees may want to leave early so that they can be home to light the candles at nightfall. The dates of Hanukkah are determined by the Hebrew calendar and can fall anywhere from late November to late December.
Passover. A major Jewish festival lasting seven days commemorating the Exodus of Jews from slavery in Egypt. The ritual observance of this holiday centers upon a home service called the seder (meaning “order”) and a festive meal.
Rosh HaShanah. The Jewish New Year, which marks the beginning of a 10-day period of prayer, self-examination, and repentance known as the High Holy Days ending with Yom Kippur.
Yom Kippur. The holiest day on the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur means “Day of Atonement” and refers to the annual observance of fasting, prayer, and repentance. Absence from work or school is common. We recommend avoiding planning major events, assignments, or exams during the 15 hours of Yom Kippur beginning and ending at sundown.
African American/Pan-African
Kwanzaa. In 1966, Kwanzaa was created by author, political activist, and college professor Maulana Karenga as the first specifically African-American holiday. It is observed from December 26 to January 1 as a "celebration of family, community, and culture.”
Muslim
Ashura and Eid al-Adha. For Muslims, Ashura commemorates the day Nuh (Noah) left the Ark and the day that Musa (Moses) was saved from the Egyptians by Allah, and the martyrdom of Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammed. It is a day of fasting for Sunni Muslims.
Muslims celebrate Eid al-Adha, the "Festival of Sacrifice" or "Greater Eid," in commemoration of Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son Ishmael as an act of obedience to God. As part of the holiday, men, women, and children are expected to dress in their finest clothing and join a large congregation in an open area or mosque for prayer.
Although Eid al-Adha is always on the same day of the Islamic calendar, the date on the Gregorian calendar (also known as the western or Christian calendar) varies from year to year since it is a solar calendar and the Islamic calendar is a lunar calendar. Furthermore, Eid al-Adha falls on one of two different Gregorian dates in different parts of the world because the boundary of crescent visibility is different from the international date line. It should be noted that in the Muslim calendar, a holiday begins at sunset on the previous day.
‘Eid al-Fitr. This day marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan and the first day of the month of Shawwal. This is a day of celebration that begins with a special ‘Eid prayer and involves day-long festivities involving food and sweets. Celebrations may last up to three days. The date of ‘Eid may vary depending on the sighting of the new moon.
Ramadan. Ramadan is the holiest month of the Islamic calendar and falls in the 9th month for a period of 28 to 30 days. During this month, Muslims fast from food and drink from dawn to sundown. Muslims use this time to focus on prayer, reading the Qur’an, and increasing their spirituality and relationship with God. The last 10 nights are considered the holiest days of the year. The beginning and end dates of Ramadan may vary depending on the sighting of the new moon.
Christian
Christmas. Observed on December 25th commemorating the birth of Jesus.
Easter. Holiday celebrating the resurrection of Jesus from the dead.
Good/Holy Friday. A day commemorating the crucifixion and death of Jesus.
Hindu
Diwali. A fall festival of lights signifying the victory of light over darkness, knowledge over ignorance, and hope over despair. Rituals of lighting candles and other forms of light extend over a five-day period, with the primary celebrations on the first night.
Employers are required to reasonably accommodate religious practices unless accommodation would cause an undue hardship on the conduct of business. Please see the national Religious Discrimination section.
A potentially difficult issue for employers during the holidays is whether to allow employees to decorate their work spaces with religious symbols and whether the company itself should decorate. Employees don't have an absolute right to engage in religious speech and expression in the workplace. Employers may establish reasonable restrictions on their manner of religious speech or expression in the workplace. If employees generally are allowed to decorate their work spaces with pictures and other items, a prohibition on decorations that are religious might be considered discriminatory. Also, one religion should not be favored over another. If one employee is allowed to put up Christmas decorations, another one shouldn't be banned from putting up Kwanzaa decorations.
There is a distinction between allowing employees to decorate their personal work spaces and the company decorating the office. An employer should not be seen as promoting one religion over another or endorsing religion generally. Accordingly, decorations should stick to a general holiday theme rather than focusing on Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, and so on. The more one specific group is recognized, the greater the chance of offending someone who has been left out. It's best to keep decorations as nonspecific and neutral as possible. The same considerations apply to the office holiday party.
Generic decorations to put the office in the holiday mood can include:
• Gingerbread houses,
• Snowflakes,
• Snowmen, and
• Candy canes.
In recent years, many employers have begun using a bank of “floating” holidays in full or partial replacement of a system of company-designated holidays. Floating holidays are days that the employee can self-designate as holidays in order to take a day off. Employees may use floating holidays to observe a religious holiday, create a long weekend when a company-recognized holiday falls on a Thursday, take a day off on their birthday, etc.
Some companies use a combination of designated and floating holidays, and a small but growing group of employers use floating holidays exclusively. If your company employs a floating holiday system, you may wish to implement specific rules and procedures that provide for ample notice to the employer when an employee chooses to designate a floating holiday. This will help to avoid work disruption and minimize the possibility that the floating holidays will be used instead as a backup bank of sick and personal days.
The federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) requires that covered employers pay nonexempt employees 11/2 times their regular rate for all hours worked in excess of 40 in a workweek. Because time off for holidays is not “hours worked,” holiday time is excluded from the overtime calculation. (However, although they are under no statutory obligation to do so, some employers choose to include holiday time off in the overtime calculation.)
Similarly, the FLSA does not require employers to pay time-and-a-half to employees who work on designated holidays unless that time exceeds 40 hours in the workweek.
Illustration. An employee works 9 hours a day Monday through Thursday for a total of 36 hours. Friday is a holiday, and the employee has the day off. Under an established policy, the company pays the employee for 8 hours on holidays, and the regular workweek runs Sunday through Saturday. Although the employee will be paid for 44 hours, he or she worked only 36 hours. The employee is entitled only to straight time for all 44 hours.
However, the employee would have been entitled to 4 hours of overtime if the employee had actually worked 8 hours on the Friday. Overtime pay is due not because Friday was a holiday, but because the hours worked on that day put the employee over the 40-hour mark.
Holiday premium. Although they are under no statutory obligation to do so, many companies pay employees their regular pay plus a premium when they work on a scheduled holiday. Under the FLSA, holiday premiums need not be considered in calculating the employee's “regular rate” for overtime purposes. In addition, holiday premiums may be used to offset overtime pay due under the FLSA.
The FLSA isn't the only federal law that can interact with holidays. There is information on how to handle holidays that fall during an employee's Family and Medical Leave Act leave. Please see the national Leave of Absence section.
Many companies require employees to complete an initial 30- to 90-day period before they are eligible to receive pay for holiday time off. To prevent absenteeism near holidays, some employers require employees to work the last workday before and the first workday after a holiday in order to receive pay for the holiday. Many companies pay part-time and temporary employees for holiday time off. Usually the amount of compensation for part-time workers is prorated on basis of the number of hours the employee regularly works.
-
Last reviewed on October 10, 2024.
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