9 official public holidays in 2025, with 0 still ahead and around 252 working days remaining.
| Date | Day | Holiday | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wed, Jan 1 | Wednesday | New Year's Day Año Nuevo | Public |
| Mon, Feb 3 | Monday | Constitution Day Día de la Constitución | Public |
| Mon, Mar 17 | Monday | Benito Juárez's birthday Natalicio de Benito Juárez | Public |
| Thu, Apr 17 | Thursday | Maundy Thursday Jueves Santo | Bank, School, Authorities |
| Fri, Apr 18 | Friday | Good Friday Viernes Santo | Bank, School, Authorities |
| Thu, May 1 | Thursday | Labour Day Día del Trabajo | Public |
| Tue, Sep 16 | Tuesday | Independence Day Día de la Independencia | Public |
| Mon, Nov 17 | Monday | Revolution Day Día de la Revolución | Public |
| Thu, Dec 25 | Thursday | Christmas Day Navidad | Public |
Wed, Jan 1 · Wednesday
New Year's Day
Año Nuevo
Public
Mon, Feb 3 · Monday
Constitution Day
Día de la Constitución
Public
Mon, Mar 17 · Monday
Benito Juárez's birthday
Natalicio de Benito Juárez
Public
Thu, Apr 17 · Thursday
Maundy Thursday
Jueves Santo
Bank, School, Authorities
Fri, Apr 18 · Friday
Good Friday
Viernes Santo
Bank, School, Authorities
Thu, May 1 · Thursday
Labour Day
Día del Trabajo
Public
Tue, Sep 16 · Tuesday
Independence Day
Día de la Independencia
Public
Mon, Nov 17 · Monday
Revolution Day
Día de la Revolución
Public
Thu, Dec 25 · Thursday
Christmas Day
Navidad
Public
Total holidays
9
in 2025
Working days remaining
252
across all of 2025
Upcoming holidays
0
during 2025
See Mexico's holidays side by side with another country to plan cross-border work.
Suggested pairs: shared border, linguistic ties, LatAm peer.
Mexico's Ley Federal del Trabajo article 74 lists seven días de descanso obligatorio: New Year's Day, the first Monday of February (Constitution Day), the third Monday of March (Benito Juárez's birthday), Labour Day, Independence Day on 16 September, the third Monday of November (Revolution Day) and Christmas Day. Each presidential inauguration on 1 October every six years is added when relevant. Religious observances such as Good Friday, Day of the Dead and Guadalupe Day are widely observed culturally and by many employers but are not statutory holidays. Banking holidays under the National Banking and Securities Commission add several additional dates that are not labour-law holidays, including Holy Thursday.
Article 69 of the Ley Federal del Trabajo requires one paid weekly rest day. The standard working week in offices and government is Monday to Friday, while retail and manufacturing often run Monday to Saturday. Article 71 entitles workers to a premium for weekend work. Civil procedure under article 286 of the Código Federal de Procedimientos Civiles treats día hábil as any day other than Saturday, Sunday and an official holiday. Settlement of Mexican peso transactions runs on the Sistema de Pagos Electrónicos Interbancarios operated by Banco de México, which uses the banking holiday list and not the labour holiday list, so the two diverge.
For people planning cross-border meetings, the practical move is to overlay Mexico's calendar with the calendars of the other countries on your team. A week that looks completely clear from your end might be a national holiday on theirs. The compare tool above pairs two country calendars and highlights the overlapping closures, so you can spot the weeks where almost no one is at their desk before you put a launch on the board.