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Mexico

Mexican Monthly Event Calendar

A free printable monthly calendar for Mexico — the dates are filled in, the statutory días festivos are marked on their legal dates(Monday moves included), and there’s a fillable box under every day for your own events.

🇲🇽 English o Español.Pick your language from the dropdown — months, weekdays and holiday names all localize (Día de la Constitución, Natalicio de Benito Juárez, Día de la Revolución), always on the law’s Monday-move dates.
Mexican monthly event calendar

Build a one-page calendar you can type events into.

Pick a month and year — we'll generate a printable PDF with the dates already filled in, Mexican statutory holidays marked (LFT Art. 74), and a fillable text box under every day. Fill it in on your computer in any PDF viewer, then print. No Adobe Acrobat required.

1-page PDF · Carta (US Letter) or A4 · fillable in any PDF viewer
Check the official sources
The statutory rest days come from Article 74 of the Ley Federal del Trabajo — verify them with PROFEDET at profedet.gob.mx — Días de descanso. Election days are declared per election and aren’t pre-printed here.
Need all 12 months? Try the Mexico yearly calendar
Whole year
Mexican Yearly Event Calendar
All 12 months as a fillable planner with the statutory holidays marked.
Open
North of the border
US Monthly Event Calendar
The same calendar with US federal holidays — handy for cross-border planning.
Open

Frequently asked questions

Which holidays are marked?
The statutory rest days under Article 74 of the Ley Federal del Trabajo: New Year's Day, Constitution Day (first Monday of February), Benito Juárez's birthday (third Monday of March), Labour Day, Independence Day (16 September), Revolution Day (third Monday of November), Christmas Day — and, every six years, the presidential inauguration on 1 October (next in 2030).
Why is Constitution Day not on 5 February?
Because the law itself moves it. Since 2006, the LFT observes Constitution Day on the FIRST Monday of February, Juárez's birthday on the THIRD Monday of March, and Revolution Day on the THIRD Monday of November — creating guaranteed long weekends (puentes). The calendar marks the legal Monday dates, which is what your employer follows.
Why aren't Semana Santa, Día de Muertos or the Virgen de Guadalupe marked?
Because they aren't statutory rest days — however universally observed. Banks close on Maundy Thursday and Good Friday (a CNBV rule), but the LFT doesn't require the day off; the same goes for Día de las Madres, Día de Muertos and 12 December. Rather than print days your workplace may not give you, we mark only the legal holidays and leave the fillable boxes for the rest.
¿Puedo hacer el calendario en español?
¡Claro! Elige Español en el menú — los meses (Enero…Diciembre), los días (Dom…Sáb) y los días festivos (Año Nuevo, Día de la Constitución, Natalicio de Benito Juárez, Día de la Revolución, Navidad) se imprimen en español.
Can I type events straight into the PDF?
Yes. Open it in Adobe Reader, Preview, Chrome, Firefox or any mobile PDF viewer, click a date and the box becomes a text field. Prints on Carta (US Letter) or A4.
Is it free?
Yes — free for personal, school or office use, no signup, no watermark. Gratis.
Updated through July 2026