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Public Holidays and Bank Holidays for China

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The list of China bank holidays, national holidays and public holidays for 2010, comes from the Q++ Worldwide Public Holidays Database, the professional source of international public holidays long trusted by the world's foremost diary publishers. The information on this page is provided for private, non-professional, use. Qualified professionals can license data for 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, and beyond. For details, please visit our licensing information page or

 
At the bottom of this page:   Recent News and Updates    Background Information    Footnotes    Disclaimer
 

Date in 2010

Holiday Name Observance*
Fri New Year's Day
Sat Spring Festival (Chinese New Year's Eve)
Sun Spring Festival (Chinese New Year)
Mon Spring Festival
Tue Spring Festival
Wed Spring Festival
Thu Spring Festival (compensated Sat.Feb.20)
Fri Spring Festival (compensated Sun.Feb.21)
Mon Tomb Sweeping Day (Qing Ming Jie)
* Fri Regional Public Holiday (Shanghai World Expo Opening) Regional
Sat Labour Day
Mon Labour Day Holiday
* Tue Regional Public Holiday (Shanghai World Expo Opening) Regional
Mon Dragon Boat Festival Holiday (compensated Sat.Jun.12)
Tue Dragon Boat Festival Holiday (compensated Sun.Jun.13)
Wed Dragon Boat Festival (Duan Wu Jie)
Wed Mid-Autumn Festival (Zhongqiu Jie)
Thu Mid-Autumn Festival Holiday (compensated Sun.Sept.19)
Fri Mid-Autumn Festival Holiday (compensated Sat.Sept.25)
Fri National Day (Guoqing Jie)
Sat National Day Holiday
Sun National Day Holiday
Mon National Day Holiday (compensated Sun.Sept.26)
Tue National Day Holiday (compensated Sat.Oct.9)
Wed National Day Holiday
Thu National Day Holiday

 © 1989-2010 Alter Ego Services

Recent News and Updates

04 Jun 2010 (The Shanghai Daily-Shaghai) China's State Council has released a statement confirming that the upcoming Dragon Boat (Duanwu) public holidays would run from Monday June 14th to Wednesday June 16th, 2010.  31 May 2010 (Radio Guangdong-Guangzhou) The Guangzhou Communications Commission has announced that the Guangzhou government had decided to declare Friday, November 12, 2010, as a one-off regional public holiday to coincide with the first day of the Guangzhou 2010 Asian Games.  02 Apr 2010 (CNReviews-Shanghai) The Shanghai government has extended the upcoming May Day public holidays period for 2 additional days to coincide with the upcoming opening of the Shanghai World Expo.  20 Jan 2010 (Xinhua-Hunan) The first results of a Chinese government sponsored online poll to solicit public opinion on a date for "national tourism day" are coming in with speculation that local governments are "forging fake support" for their recommendations.  08 Dec 2009 (State Council of China-Beijing) Earlier today, the State Council of China released China's official list of 2010 public holidays, including the list of working Saturdays and Sundays that compensate for some of the bridge public holidays and for the traditional spring and fall, week-long, Golden Week public holidays.  26 Sep 2009 (AFP-Guangdong) Mao Xinyu, a member of China's National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), and the grandson of late Chairman Mao Zedong, has proposed that China declare 2 public holidays to commemorate his grand-father.  18 Sep 2009 (Xinhua-Yinchuan) The regional government of China's autonomous region of Ningxia have declared Monday, September 21, 2009, a public holiday on the occasion of the End of Ramadan Muslim festival.  31 Mar 2009 (Asia Times Online-Hong Kong) A few hours ago, the Guangdong provincial government issued an emergency notice canceling its arrangements for the upcoming May Day Golden Week, and removed all previous notices about the long holiday from all the Guangdong government's websites.  26 Mar 2009 (Xinhua-Beijing) China's State Council Thursday asked local governments to "strictly" observe regulations on national holidays, thus putting an end to the ongoing speculation that many regions would restore the May Golden Week public holidays this year.  15 Mar 2009 (Xinhua-Beijing) China's Hangzhou Tourism Commission has announced that it plans to resume the seven-day May Day Golden Week public holiday by adding a paid holiday of four days before or after the public holiday, or by adding two days before and two days after the holiday.  More News Updates For the full version of the summarized news items above, and older news items not displayed above, go to the China public holidays news and updates page, or worldwide public holidays news and updates page, or subscribe to one of our free email newsletters.


Background Information

Regulatory Body: The final decision on adjustments to China's holiday schedule is made by a concertation of the 14 ministries that constitute the National Holiday Office.  Public Holidays Extensions: To achieve week-long public holidays around Lunar New Year (Chun Jie) and October 1st, and 3-day public holidays for other holidays, it is customary to make one or both of the weekend days of a nearby weekend into working days.  Partial Holidays: In addition to the list of official national public holidays, listed above, there are partial holidays for particular groups of people. Business meetings may or may not be affected. • Women receive a half-day holiday on March 8’s International Women’s Day (Funu Jie) • Youth 14-18 get half a day off on May 4 on Youth Day (Qingnian Jie) • The under 14s are spoiled with a full-day off on June 6 for Children’s Day (Ertong Jie) • Members of the PLA (People's Liberation Army) get a half-day off on August 1. • Serf Emancipation Day (Tibet) on March 28. • In addition, some of the national minorities are able to determine their own holidays in accordance with their own traditional festivals  Golden Weeks: it is customary for people to work some weekends either before or after the official holiday time in order to make some of the official holidays into an entire week off from work called Golden Weeks. These Golden Weeks used to be centered around the Lunar New Year, May Day and October 1st public holidays, but the May Golden Week was dropped at the end of 2007.  Chinese Lunar New Year's Eve was made into a public holiday (the first day of the Lunar New Year Golden Week) at the end of 2007.  Workweek: offices and agencies in China follow the five workdays per week system. Since 2005, factories have to, at least, give the Sundays off to their workers.  Beijing 2008 Olympic Games: Although the listed start of the Beijing 2008 Olympics is August 8th, the first day of events is August 6th.  China International Codes CN and CHN (2 and 3-letter ISO3166 codes) and .cn (ICANN national top-level internet domain). • Other Sources of Information The following specialized websites are also a good source of China information and news: The People's Bank of China (China central bank), ASI Hot Spots (security-related world events: terrorist threats, political strife, strikes, criminal activity, aviation incidents and health outbreaks), CIA World Factbook (China maps, demographics and economic statistics), and Wikipedia (includes China commemorative dates that are not necessarily public holidays).


Footnotes
*

Observance : Any entry in the Observance column indicates that, in China, the holiday may be regional or non-official or limited to certain religious and/or linguistic groups, or begin at a time other than midnight. Note that religious holidays are included only if they are national public holidays, or if the national labour code has specific holiday allowances for employees of specific religions. For more information, see our pages on the religious calendars of the world.


Disclaimer
In many parts of the world, holidays are subject to arbitrary, last minute, changes by local authorities. While every effort has been made to present an accurate list of 2010 bank holidays, legal holidays and public holidays for China, we cannot accept any responsibility for any error or omission in the data presented above. You are therefore advised to verify the above dates with the embassy or consulate of China, before planning any trip to China. For last-minute updates to worldwide public holidays, visit our blog or subscribe to our free email newsletters.



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