Singapore

Six long weekends await Singaporeans in 2026 holiday calendar

Image Credits: UnsplashImage Credits: Unsplash

Singapore residents will enjoy six long weekends in 2026—a noticeable increase from previous years—thanks to the alignment of public holidays and weekend dates. But behind the calendar cheer lies a predictable rhythm of workplace policy, statutory entitlements, and employer-employee negotiation.

On June 16, the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) released its official list of gazetted public holidays for 2026. The year will feature 11 holidays, beginning with New Year’s Day on Thursday, January 1.

Three holidays—Good Friday (April 3), Labour Day (May 1), and Christmas Day (December 25)—fall on Fridays, automatically creating long weekends. Meanwhile, Vesak Day (May 31), National Day (August 9), and Deepavali (November 8) fall on Sundays, and the following Mondays will be designated as replacement holidays under Singapore law.

The additional long weekends—up from four in 2025—may boost travel planning, domestic consumption, and employee well-being. But the impact varies depending on the nature of employment and sector.

Under the Employment Act, all employees covered by the legislation are entitled to 11 paid public holidays annually. If any holiday falls on a rest day or non-working day, employers must compensate with a day off or extra pay.

That entitlement is not optional: it is a statutory right for Singapore-based employees earning below S$4,500/month for workmen and S$2,600/month for non-workmen, as well as many professionals, managers, and executives unless explicitly excluded. What matters more is what happens when work is still required.

Employees required to work on a public holiday must receive an additional day’s basic pay on top of their regular salary. This ensures that even shift-based or operational roles see tangible benefit for holiday duties. Alternatively, time off in lieu may be granted by mutual agreement.

But this compensation rule only applies if the employee is covered under the Act. For those outside its scope—typically high-earning executives or freelancers—terms depend on the employment contract.

For example, a senior software engineer earning S$7,000 monthly may not be legally entitled to a public holiday benefit unless her contract specifies so. In contrast, a retail assistant earning S$2,300 is automatically entitled to paid time off or cash compensation under the Act.

Singapore’s labor law also allows for flexibility. Employers and employees may mutually agree to substitute one public holiday for another working day. This is especially common in multinational teams that prefer to align certain breaks with global calendars (e.g., taking the Monday after Thanksgiving in exchange for Deepavali).

However, such substitutions must be documented and agreed upon. Without explicit consent, the original public holiday entitlements stand.

For employers, this opens opportunities to design rostered leave in a way that maintains operations without running afoul of legal requirements. For employees, it’s an avenue for customizing leave to suit personal or family preferences.

While Singapore guarantees 11 public holidays, countries like Malaysia and Indonesia often see a higher number of federally recognized or state-level public holidays. However, Singapore’s enforcement of paid entitlements and substitution rights is comparatively clearer and more uniform.

In Malaysia, the number of public holidays can vary by state, and employers must navigate both federal and local observances. In Indonesia, several “cuti bersama” (joint leave days) are announced annually by the government but are not legally mandated, often leaving employees unsure of their exact entitlements.

By contrast, Singapore’s fixed annual calendar—with clear mechanisms for substitution and compensation—remains predictable for both HR compliance and financial planning.

For many professionals, six long weekends sounds generous. But those weekends do not translate into automatic time off if rostering, workload, or industry schedules don’t permit it.

This is especially relevant in sectors like hospitality, transport, healthcare, and security, where weekend shifts are common and public holiday workloads surge. Employers in these fields must budget for higher wage costs or additional off days—a non-trivial factor when public holidays align with peak demand.

Likewise, for self-employed and gig workers, public holidays offer no statutory benefit unless pre-structured into service contracts.

The 2026 calendar gives Singaporeans more chances to plan getaways or recharge. But these long weekends only benefit workers if supported by contract clarity, scheduling discipline, and employer compliance. A longer break may be on paper—but realizing its full value still depends on the structure behind it.


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