Find the Christmas Day
Show Christmas Day (December 25) and its weekday for each year. Runs entirely in your browser, so your data never leaves your device.
Output
The result appears here as you type.
How to use Find the Christmas Day
- 1. Set the year range. Enter From year and To year to cover the span you need, such as 2026 to 2027, and December 25 for each year in between gets listed with its weekday.
- 2. Pick a separator. Set Separator to choose how each year's line is joined, such as a newline, so the output pastes cleanly into a calendar or spreadsheet.
- 3. Read the dates and weekdays. Each output line pairs the year with December 25's date and weekday, useful for knowing whether Christmas falls on a weekend in a given year.
- 4. Copy the results. Copy the list into an office holiday calendar, family planning document, or retail schedule.
When to use Find the Christmas Day
Find the Christmas Day shows the date and weekday of December 25 for any range of years. Since the date itself never changes, the useful information is which weekday it lands on, which affects travel, retail hours and office closures.
- Planning office holiday closures. An HR team building next year's holiday calendar wants to confirm whether Christmas falls on a weekday or weekend to decide how many paid days off to schedule around it.
- Booking holiday travel early. A family wants to see which weekday Christmas falls on for the next several years to decide which year offers the longest natural travel window.
- Scheduling retail staffing. A store manager planning holiday season staffing wants to confirm the weekday of Christmas across upcoming years to anticipate weekend versus weekday shopping patterns.
- Writing a historical reference. An article discussing a past Christmas event wants to confirm what day of the week December 25 fell on in that particular year.
Examples
Christmas in 2026–2027
Output
2026: 2026-12-25 (Friday) 2027: 2027-12-25 (Saturday)
About the Find the Christmas Day tool
Find the Christmas Day runs as plain JavaScript in your browser tab, with no server behind it. Show Christmas Day (December 25) and its weekday for each year. Whatever you put in stays on your device from start to finish.
The tool is part of EditSafely's Time Tools section, 90 single-purpose utilities built around the same idea: open the page, get the result, keep your data to yourself.
You can shape the output with 3 settings, including From year, To year and Separator, and the result refreshes the moment you change one. A worked example further down the page shows exactly what the tool produces for a real input.
That local-first design has practical benefits beyond privacy. The tool keeps working on a flaky connection once the page has loaded, results are instant because nothing round-trips to a server, and it is safe to use with confidential material.
Frequently asked questions
Does Find the Christmas Day cost anything?
Yes, it is completely free. All 2,658 tools on EditSafely work without an account, a subscription or usage limits.
Does the generator send anything to a server?
No data leaves your device. The whole tool is JavaScript that runs inside your browser tab, so there is no upload, no server-side processing and no log of what you did. If you disconnect from the internet after the page loads, it keeps working.
How do I get a different result?
Run the generator again. Each run is computed fresh on your device, and any options you change are applied to the next result immediately.
Do I need to sign up or install anything?
Nothing to install and no account needed. Open the page in any up-to-date browser, including on a phone or tablet, and the tool is ready.
How do I use the result?
The output panel has a one-click copy button, and you can keep refining the input while you work; the result updates in place as you type.