Hinduism · 2030
In 2030, Holi falls on a Wednesday, running through Thursday, March 21, 2030.
Holi 2030 falls on Wednesday, March 20, 2030. That is a Wednesday, a regular working weekday in most countries. It is the 79th day of 2030 and sits in ISO week 12. If you are planning around it, the day of the week matters as much as the date itself, because it decides whether the observance creates a long weekend, a midweek pause, or a day that has to be moved under local substitute-holiday rules.
Holi falls midweek on a Wednesday, splitting the working week in two rather than extending a weekend.
Compared with 2029, when it fell on March 1, Holi 2030 moves about 19 days later in the Gregorian calendar. This drift is normal for a holiday tied to a lunar or lunisolar calendar rather than a fixed civil date.
How the date moves in the years either side of 2030. Each year links to its own page with a countdown and the full day-of-week detail.
Holi is a Hindu spring festival widely known as the Festival of Colors. It is associated with the full moon of the Hindu month Phalguna and usually falls in March on the Gregorian calendar. Celebrations often include Holika Dahan bonfires on the eve, followed by gatherings where people throw colored powders and water, sing, dance, and share sweets. The festival carries regional stories and meanings, including the triumph of good over evil, devotion, renewal, and the arrival of spring. timekit reads Holi from its shipped religious holidays table, using the local Vikram calendar data where available and the same published hand table for later years.
Calendar note: From the local Vikram calendar festival table; shown as a 2-day Holi span.