China · Thursday, June 18, 2026
Dragon Boat Festival falls on Friday, June 19, 2026, 1 day from now.
Counting down to Dragon Boat Festival
Counting down in your device's local time zone. Updates every second.
Today in China
Working day
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Next public holiday
1 day
Dragon Boat Festival
Working days until it
0
Mon–Fri, excluding other holidays
Dragon Boat Festival
端午节
Fri, Jun 19
next up
Mid-Autumn Festival
中秋节
Fri, Sep 25
National Day
国庆节
Thu, Oct 1
National Day
国庆节
Fri, Oct 2
National Day
国庆节
Sat, Oct 3
New Year's Day
元旦
Fri, Jan 1
Chinese New Year (Spring Festival)
春节
Sat, Feb 6
Labour Day
劳动节
Sat, May 1
Dragon Boat Festival
端午节
Wed, Jun 9
Mid-Autumn Festival
中秋节
Wed, Sep 15
National Day
国庆节
Fri, Oct 1
China observes seven statutory public holidays under the General Office of the State Council's annual circular, but the practical calendar is more complicated. The State Council mandates make-up working weekends to bridge holidays into seven-day Golden Weeks for Spring Festival and National Day. A typical Spring Festival therefore gives seven consecutive days off, paid for by working the immediately preceding or following Saturday and Sunday. The full statutory count is eleven days off but the calendar can show fifteen consecutive days of work without a break around major holidays. Dragon Boat, Qingming and Mid-Autumn Festival follow the lunar calendar and shift annually.
Knowing the exact date of the next holiday in China 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 China reads correctly for you wherever you are.
The Labour Law of the People's Republic of China article 36 caps weekly working hours at 44, with article 38 requiring at least one rest day per week. The standard urban office week is Monday to Friday with both weekend days off, but factories and construction commonly operate six days. The Civil Procedure Law article 75 rolls deadlines falling on a statutory holiday to the next working day, but make-up working Saturdays count as working days for procedural purposes. Settlement for renminbi runs on the People's Bank of China's CNAPS system, which closes on the eleven statutory days and reopens on the designated make-up working weekends.
Right now there are about 0 full working days between today and Dragon Boat Festival, 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 China, that is the realistic window you have before the next closure.
For cross-border planning, overlay the China 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 China.