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2025 Holidays - Dominican Republic

Name Weekday Date Type Subdivisions
New Year's Day Wednesday Jan. 1, 2025 National All
Epiphany Monday Jan. 6, 2025 National All
Lady of Altagracia Tuesday Jan. 21, 2025 National All
Juan Pablo Duarte Day Sunday Jan. 26, 2025 National All
Independence Day Thursday Feb. 27, 2025 National All
Good Friday Friday April 18, 2025 National All
Labour Day Monday May 5, 2025 National All
Corpus Christi Thursday June 19, 2025 National All
Restoration Day Saturday Aug. 16, 2025 National All
Our Lady of Mercedes Day Wednesday Sept. 24, 2025 National All
Constitution Day Monday Nov. 10, 2025 National All
Christmas Day Thursday Dec. 25, 2025 National All

* Estimated holiday dates

We continuously monitor and update holiday information, but there may be occasional inaccuracies.

Dominican Republic workweek and weekend

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Workday Workday Workday Workday Workday Weekend Weekend

Dominican Republic Public Holiday Observance Rules

1. When a Public Holiday Falls on a Sunday

- Substitute Day for Key Fixed Holidays: Many major fixed-date public holidays (e.g., Independence Day on February 27 and Restoration Day on August 16) that fall on a Sunday are often observed on the following Monday as a substitute day.

- Official Calendar and Decrees: The annual government-issued public holiday calendar specifies which holidays will be "mondayized." Employers and employees should consult this schedule for the current observance rules.

- Employer Responsibilities: If a holiday is shifted to Monday, employers must observe the substitute day. Employees working on that day are entitled to overtime pay or compensatory time off, per Dominican labor law.

2. When a Public Holiday Falls on a Saturday

- Observed on the Calendar Date or Shifted: Generally, if a public holiday falls on a Saturday, it is observed on that day. However, for some key fixed holidays, the official decree may call for the holiday to be shifted to Monday to create a long weekend.

- Employer Compliance: Employers must follow the official calendar. If no shift is declared, the holiday remains on Saturday, and employees working that day should receive appropriate compensation.

3. Bridge Holidays (Long Weekends)

- Government-Initiated Bridge Days: Occasionally, the government may declare additional “bridge” days to extend a holiday period into a long weekend, especially when multiple holidays occur close together.

- No Automatic Bridging: There is no uniform rule automatically creating long weekends; any bridging is explicitly set in the official holiday schedule.

- Employer Discretion: Employers may offer extra days off beyond statutory requirements, but must at least adhere to the government-declared schedule.

4. Special Cases for Public Holidays

- Fixed vs. Movable Holidays: Fixed-date holidays (e.g., New Year’s Day, Independence Day, Restoration Day, Constitution Day, Christmas Day) follow the rules above. Movable holidays (e.g., Good Friday, Easter Monday) are observed on the dates specified by the official decree.

- Local Observances: Some regional or culturally specific holidays may have additional or modified rules as determined by local regulations.

5. Additional Notes

- Legal Framework: Public holiday observance is governed by national legislation and communicated annually via the official holiday calendar.

- Compensation for Holiday Work: Employees working on a public holiday—or its substitute day—are entitled to premium pay or compensatory time off as provided under Dominican labor law.

- Employer Flexibility: Employers may offer additional benefits or extra days off at their discretion, but must adhere to the official calendar.