Leap year check
No — 1750 is not a leap year.
1750 is not divisible by 4, so it is NOT a leap year — February has the usual 28 days.
A year is a leap year in the Gregorian calendar when it is divisible by 4, with one exception and one exception to that exception: a year divisible by 100 is not a leap year unless it is also divisible by 400. 1750 is not divisible by 4 (1750 ÷ 4 = 437.50), so it cannot be a leap year. The nearest leap years are 1748 before it and 1752 after.
1750 has no February 29 — February ends on the 28th. The closest leap day is in 1752, when February 29 falls on a Tuesday. If you are counting toward a leapling birthday or a date-sensitive deadline, that 1752 leap day is the one to watch.
1750 runs 365 days, or 52 full weeks plus 1 day. The leap year before 1750 was 1748 and the next one is 1752, keeping the familiar four-year rhythm. To do date math across 1750 — counting days to a deadline, an age, or an anniversary that crosses a leap day — use the days-between calculator, which handles leap days automatically.
Check another year
Type a different year, or count the leap years across a range.
Enter any year from 1582 to 4000.
No — 1750 is not a leap year
1750 is not divisible by 4, so it is NOT a leap year — February has the usual 28 days.
Count leap years in a range
How many leap years fall between two years (inclusive).
5 leap years between 1750 and 1770 (21 years, about one every 4.20 years).