Coptic calendar tool
Twelve thirty-day months plus a five or six-day Nasie. Convert both directions, see the feast calendar, and share or embed the result.
Converts at midnight UTC for a stable, shareable date.
11 Paoni 1742 AM
Ⲡⲁⲱⲛⲓ · Paoni بؤونة
Coptic Christmas (Nativity)
ⲡⲓϫⲓⲛⲙⲓⲥⲓ · 29 Koiak 1742 AM
Coptic Orthodox Nativity, 29 Koiak (7 January Gregorian).
Jan 7, 2026 · 162 days ago
Theophany (Epiphany)
ⲡⲓⲑⲉⲟⲫⲁⲛⲓⲁ · 11 Tobi 1742 AM
Baptism of Christ in the Jordan, 11 Tobi (19 January Gregorian).
Jan 19, 2026 · 150 days ago
Annunciation
ⲡⲓϣⲁⲓ ⲙ̀ⲡⲓϩⲓϣⲉⲛⲛⲟⲩϥⲓ · 29 Paremhat 1742 AM
Feast of the Annunciation, 29 Paremhat.
Apr 7, 2026 · 72 days ago
Coptic Easter (Pascha)
ⲡⲓⲡⲁⲥⲭⲁ · 4 Parmouti 1742 AM
Coptic Orthodox Easter (Julian-rule Eastern computation).
Apr 12, 2026 · 67 days ago
Nayrouz (Coptic New Year)
Ⲛⲓⲣⲱⲙⲡⲓ · 1 Thout 1743 AM
Coptic New Year, first day of Thout (11 or 12 September Gregorian).
Sep 11, 2026 · in 85 days
Feast of the Cross
ⲡⲓϣⲁⲓ ⲛ̀ⲧⲉ ⲡⲓⲥⲧⲁⲩⲣⲟⲥ · 17 Thout 1743 AM
Feast of the Holy Cross, 17 Thout (27 September Gregorian).
Sep 27, 2026 · in 101 days
The Coptic calendar counts its years from 284 CE, the accession of the Roman emperor Diocletian. His reign brought the most violent persecution Egypt's Christians had faced, and the Coptic church chose to date its years from that suffering rather than erase it: Anno Martyrum, the Year of the Martyrs. The structure of the calendar is far older. It descends directly from the ancient Egyptian civil calendar, the same twelve months of thirty days plus a short final stretch that Egypt had kept for millennia.
Twelve months of exactly thirty days run from Thout through Mesori, then a thirteenth month called Nasie (from the Greek epagomenai, "days added on") carries five days, or six in a leap year. The Coptic leap rule is the simple Julian one: every fourth year. This is the same frame the Ethiopian calendar inherited, which is why the two run in lockstep, separated only by their different starting epochs.
The year opens with Nayrouz on 1 Thout, falling on 11 September (or 12 in the year before a Gregorian leap year). Sixteen days later comes the Feast of the Cross. Coptic Christmas, the Nativity, is kept on 29 Koiak, which lands on 7 January Gregorian, and Theophany follows on 11 Tobi (19 January). Coptic Easter (Pascha) uses the Julian-rule paschal computation, so it usually falls a week or more after western Easter, in step with the Eastern Orthodox and Ethiopian churches.