lastUpdated: 2026-06-22
National Public Holidays vs. Religious Feasts in Türkiye
Türkiye's public holiday calendar reflects the country's dual identity as a secular republic with a predominantly Muslim population. The official holiday framework established under Turkish labour law (İş Kanunu) distinguishes between national (milli) public holidays rooted in the history of the Republic, and religious Bayram holidays (dini bayramlar) rooted in the Islamic lunar calendar.
The national public holidays are fixed in the Gregorian calendar and commemorate key events in the founding and defence of the Republic of Türkiye: National Sovereignty and Children's Day (23 April), Labour and Solidarity Day (1 May), Commemoration of Atatürk, Youth and Sports Day (19 May), Democracy and National Unity Day (15 July), Victory Day (30 August), and Republic Day (29 October). New Year's Day (1 January) rounds out the fixed-date statutory holidays.
The two religious Bayram holidays — Ramazan Bayramı (Eid al-Fitr, three days) and Kurban Bayramı (Eid al-Adha, four days) — are determined by the lunar Hijri calendar and shift approximately ten to eleven days earlier each Gregorian year. For 2048, the confirmed dates depend on official moon sighting announcements; the dates listed in this calendar are tentative. Crucially, each Bayram is preceded by an Arife (half-day) designated as a public holiday in its own right — meaning workers are entitled to a half-day off on the afternoon before each Bayram begins. Employers and HR managers must account for these Arife half-days when planning leave rosters in 2048.
Arife (Half-Days) and Long Weekends in 2048
One of the most practically important features of Türkiye's holiday calendar is the Arife half-day public holiday that precedes both Ramazan Bayramı and Kurban Bayramı. Under Turkish labour law, employees are entitled to a half-day off from noon on Arife, making the effective start of each Bayram holiday the afternoon before the official first day. This creates a de facto extended Bayram break that begins mid-afternoon and runs through the full duration of the three-day or four-day holiday.
Beyond the Bayram periods, the placement of fixed-date national holidays against the Gregorian calendar in 2048 determines which long weekends emerge. When a national holiday falls on a Thursday or Tuesday, many Turkish employers — particularly in the private sector — grant a köprü gün (bridge day) of discretionary leave on the adjacent Friday or Monday, effectively creating a four-day break. Checking the day-of-week for each national holiday at the start of 2048 is the fastest way to identify these long weekend opportunities and plan annual leave accordingly.
The Kurban Bayramı four-day holiday, which is the longest single public holiday block in the Turkish calendar, generates the largest movement of people of any event in the year — comparable in scale to the French August exodus or the Chinese Golden Week. Intercity transport and accommodation for the 2048 Kurban Bayramı period should be booked well in advance.
Plan Ahead with the Printable PDF Calendar
Türkiye's combination of fixed Gregorian national holidays, lunar Islamic Bayram dates, and Arife half-days makes a consolidated 2048 reference calendar an essential planning tool for individuals, HR professionals, and businesses operating in or with Türkiye.
Our Türkiye 2048 holiday calendar is available as a downloadable, print-ready PDF formatted for A4 paper. It clearly distinguishes between national public holidays, religious Bayram days, Arife half-days, and cultural observances, and flags tentative Islamic holiday dates pending official moon sighting confirmation. When confirmed dates are announced — typically by the Presidency of Religious Affairs (Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı) — users are advised to verify and update accordingly.
Download the PDF, pin it to your office wall or import the key dates into your digital calendar, and enter 2048 with your leave planning, project scheduling, and travel bookings already sorted.