Festival hub
"Secular" is something of a misnomer for the holidays in this group – many have religious roots (Halloween in Celtic Samhain and Christian All Hallows' Eve, Saint Patrick's Day in the patron saint of Ireland, Valentine's Day in a 5th-century martyr) but have shed their explicitly liturgical character and become broadly civic, retail, or cultural events. What they share is that they are observed largely independent of any one religion, often by people of every religion and none, and that the calendar around them now drives a meaningful share of global consumer activity.
The secular calendar is dominated by the Western year. New Year's Day (January 1) is recognized in nearly every country; Valentine's Day on February 14 is mainstream in over 100 countries; Mother's Day (second Sunday of May in the United States and most of the world) and Father's Day (third Sunday of June) follow the US-set pattern in much of the Anglosphere, Latin America, and East Asia. Halloween on October 31, Thanksgiving in the US (fourth Thursday of November) and Canada (second Monday of October), the Black Friday – Cyber Monday retail block, Christmas (treated as both religious and secular), Boxing Day on December 26, and New Year's Eve close the year.
The retail dimension is enormous. The US National Retail Federation estimated that 2024 winter holiday spending would exceed $980 billion in the United States alone; Halloween retail spending in the US is roughly $12 billion annually; Valentine's Day is about $26 billion; Mother's Day and Father's Day combined are roughly $50 billion. Black Friday and Cyber Monday have together expanded into a global discount window that now encompasses Singles' Day in China (November 11, originating in 1993 at Nanjing University and turned into a retail mega-event by Alibaba in 2009 – Singles' Day GMV regularly exceeds $80 billion), Boxing Day in the Commonwealth, and Amazon Prime Day in mid-July.
Beyond shopping, the secular calendar carries enormous countdown traffic – New Year's Eve and the Times Square ball drop, the build-up to Halloween and Christmas, weddings and proposals on Valentine's Day, and college sports rivalries built around US Thanksgiving. The civic anchors – US Independence Day (July 4), Canada Day (July 1), Bastille Day (July 14), and Australia Day (January 26) – combine national pride with public holidays and major fireworks displays.
Most secular holidays are fixed-date or fixed-weekday observances on the Gregorian calendar. New Year's Day, Valentine's Day, Saint Patrick's Day, US Independence Day, Halloween, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, and Boxing Day are fixed dates. Mother's Day, Father's Day, Memorial Day, Labor Day, US Thanksgiving, Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and Canadian Thanksgiving are fixed weekdays in their month. The main moving parts are when fixed-date holidays fall on weekends – the US federal government typically observes them on the nearest weekday, while the UK, Australia, and New Zealand commonly use a "Monday-ised" rule.
Mother's Day is the second Sunday of May in over 80 countries, but the UK observes Mothering Sunday on the fourth Sunday of Lent (mid-March); much of the Arab world celebrates on March 21 (the spring equinox); Russia and most of the post-Soviet world combines a maternal element with International Women's Day on March 8. Halloween is biggest in the US, Canada, Ireland, and the UK, and increasingly observed in Mexico (alongside the related Día de los Muertos on November 1–2), the Philippines, Japan, and Western Europe; in Latin America, the larger autumn celebration is Day of the Dead. Boxing Day is a Commonwealth phenomenon – substantial in the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa, and the Caribbean.
For the Christian roots of several "secular" festivals, see the Christian festival hub (Christmas, Saint Patrick's Day, Valentine's Day origins). For Lunar New Year traditions, see the Chinese festival hub.
Why is Thanksgiving on different dates in the US and Canada? The US federal date was set as the fourth Thursday of November by Congress in 1941; Canadian Thanksgiving was set as the second Monday of October by Parliament in 1957, in part because Canada's harvest season runs earlier.
Is Halloween a public holiday? No, in any major country – Halloween is a cultural observance, not a statutory holiday, even where it is widely celebrated.
Why is Mother's Day on different dates around the world? The UK preserves the medieval Mothering Sunday (mid-Lent); the Arab world links it to the spring equinox; the US-set second-Sunday-of-May rule was popularized by Anna Jarvis in 1908 and became official in 1914.
What is the typical New Year's greeting? "Happy New Year" in English; "Bonne année" in French; "Feliz año nuevo" in Spanish; "Frohes neues Jahr" in German; "Akemashite omedetou gozaimasu" in Japanese.
What is Cyber Monday? The Monday after US Thanksgiving, named in 2005 by the National Retail Federation to mark the year's biggest day for online shopping; now extends to the full "Cyber Week."
Tracked events
Mother's Day (US) 2026
Memorial Day (US) 2026
Father's Day (US) 2026
Independence Day (US) 2026
Labor Day (US) 2026
Thanksgiving (Canada) 2026
Halloween 2026
Thanksgiving (US) 2026
Black Friday 2026