8 official public holidays in 2014, with 0 still ahead and around 256 working days remaining.
| Date | Day | Holiday | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wed, Jan 1 | Wednesday | New Year's Day Tahun Baru Masehi | Public |
| Fri, Apr 18 | Friday | Good Friday Wafat Isa Almasih | Public |
| Sun, Apr 20 | Sunday | Easter Sunday Paskah | Public |
| Thu, May 1 | Thursday | Labour Day Hari Buruh Internasional | Public |
| Thu, May 29 | Thursday | Ascension Day Kenaikan Isa Almasih | Public |
| Sun, Jun 1 | Sunday | Pancasila Day Hari Lahir Pancasila | Public |
| Sun, Aug 17 | Sunday | Independence Day Hari Ulang Tahun Kemerdekaan Republik Indonesia | Public |
| Thu, Dec 25 | Thursday | Christmas Day Hari Raya Natal | Public |
Wed, Jan 1 · Wednesday
New Year's Day
Tahun Baru Masehi
Public
Fri, Apr 18 · Friday
Good Friday
Wafat Isa Almasih
Public
Sun, Apr 20 · Sunday
Easter Sunday
Paskah
Public
Thu, May 1 · Thursday
Labour Day
Hari Buruh Internasional
Public
Thu, May 29 · Thursday
Ascension Day
Kenaikan Isa Almasih
Public
Sun, Jun 1 · Sunday
Pancasila Day
Hari Lahir Pancasila
Public
Sun, Aug 17 · Sunday
Independence Day
Hari Ulang Tahun Kemerdekaan Republik Indonesia
Public
Thu, Dec 25 · Thursday
Christmas Day
Hari Raya Natal
Public
Total holidays
8
in 2014
Working days remaining
256
across all of 2014
Upcoming holidays
0
during 2014
See Indonesia's holidays side by side with another country to plan cross-border work.
Indonesia's public holidays are set jointly each year by the Ministers of Manpower, Religion and State Apparatus Reform under a Surat Keputusan Bersama (SKB) gazette. The list runs to about sixteen statutory holidays plus a varying number of cuti bersama (joint leave) days that extend major observances. The standing core includes New Year's Day, Chinese New Year, Bali's Nyepi Day of Silence, Good Friday, Vesak (Waisak), Pancasila Day on 1 June, Independence Day on 17 August, Christmas Day, plus the Islamic Isra Mi'raj, Eid al-Fitr (two days, called Idul Fitri or Lebaran), Eid al-Adha (Idul Adha) and the Islamic New Year (1 Muharram) and Prophet's birthday (Maulid).
Indonesia's Manpower Law 13 of 2003 articles 77 and 79 set a 40-hour standard week over either five days (Monday to Friday at 8 hours) or six days (Monday to Saturday at 7 hours). The standard private-sector office and banking week is Monday to Friday with Sunday as the statutory rest day. The Civil Procedure Code (HIR/RBg) and Law 30 of 1999 on arbitration roll procedural deadlines falling on a Sunday or public holiday to the next working day. Settlement of rupiah transactions runs on Bank Indonesia's BI-RTGS and BI-Fast systems, which observe the SKB-gazetted holiday list including cuti bersama days.