Brazil · Thursday, June 18, 2026
Independence Day falls on Monday, September 7, 2026, 81 days from now.
Counting down to Independence Day
Counting down in your device's local time zone. Updates every second.
Today in Brazil
Working day
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Next public holiday
81 days
Independence Day
Working days until it
56
Mon–Fri, excluding other holidays
Independence Day
Independência do Brasil
Mon, Sep 7
next up
Our Lady of Aparecida
Nossa Senhora Aparecida
Mon, Oct 12
All Souls' Day
Dia de Finados
Mon, Nov 2
Republic Proclamation Day
Proclamação da República
Sun, Nov 15
Black Awareness Day
Dia da Consciência Negra
Fri, Nov 20
Christmas Day
Natal
Fri, Dec 25
New Year's Day
Confraternização Universal
Fri, Jan 1
Carnival
Carnaval
Mon, Feb 8
Carnival
Carnaval
Tue, Feb 9
Good Friday
Sexta-feira Santa
Fri, Mar 26
Easter Sunday
Domingo de Páscoa
Sun, Mar 28
Tiradentes
Dia de Tiradentes
Wed, Apr 21
Brazil's public holidays come in three layers under Law 9.093 of 1995. The federal layer fixes nine national holidays including Tiradentes Day on 21 April, Independence Day on 7 September and Our Lady of Aparecida on 12 October. States and the Federal District add their own, and each município may declare up to four municipal holidays plus the municipal anniversary, which is why São Paulo closes for the city's foundation on 25 January while Rio de Janeiro closes for São Sebastião on 20 January. Carnival is famously not a federal holiday by statute, but a facultative day off observed almost universally in practice and made statutory in some states.
Knowing the exact date of the next holiday in Brazil matters for more than time off. It tells payroll teams when a pay run shifts, tells anyone with a filing or payment deadline whether a due date rolls forward, and tells cross-border teams which day a counterpart will be unreachable. The countdown above is calculated from the nationally recognised public holiday list and updates live in your own time zone, so a date that is "tomorrow" for someone in Brazil reads correctly for you wherever you are.
The Consolidação das Leis do Trabalho article 67 requires one paid weekly rest day, preferably Sunday. Article 132 of the Codice Civile equivalent in Brazilian civil procedure (Código de Processo Civil article 219) treats dia útil as any day other than Saturday, Sunday and a public holiday for procedural deadlines. The standard private-sector week is Monday to Friday in offices, often Monday to Saturday in retail and trades. Settlement of real transactions runs on the Sistema de Pagamentos Brasileiro operated by the Banco Central, which observes federal holidays. State and municipal holidays affect local commerce but not national clearing.
Right now there are about 56 full working days between today and Independence Day, counting Monday to Friday and skipping any other public holidays in between. If you are scheduling a deliverable, a delivery, or a meeting that depends on people being at their desks in Brazil, that is the realistic window you have before the next closure.
For cross-border planning, overlay the Brazil calendar with the calendars of the other countries your team works with. A week that looks completely open from your side can be a national holiday on theirs, and the clash only shows up when you compare the two side by side. The full holiday page links into a country-by-country comparison so you can spot the weeks where almost nobody is at their desk before you commit to a date.
Holiday dates are compiled from Nager.Date and the national sources listed above. Regional and substitute-day rules vary; for legal deadlines, confirm the observed date with the relevant official calendar for Brazil.