Philippines
Philippine Monthly Event Calendar
A free printable monthly calendar for the Philippines — the dates are filled in, regular holidays and special non-working days are markedstraight from the official proclamation, and there’s a fillable box under every day for your own events.
🇵🇭 English or Filipino.Pick your language from the dropdown — months, weekdays and holiday names all localize (Araw ng Bagong Taon, Huwebes Santo, Araw ng mga Bayani). Holiday dates follow the year’s presidential proclamation, including the separately-proclaimed Eid’l Fitr and Eid’l Adha.
Philippine 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, Philippine holidays marked (regular + special days), 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 · A4 or US Letter · fillable in any PDF viewer
Check the official sources
Philippine holidays are set each year by presidential proclamation. Verify any date against the Official Gazette — Nationwide holidays. Eid’l Fitr and Eid’l Adha are proclaimed separately once the lunar dates are determined, and local (city/province) special days aren’t pre-printed here.Whole year
Philippine Yearly Event Calendar
All 12 months as a fillable planner with the proclaimed holidays marked.
Open →
Tax year
Philippines Tax Year Calendar (Jan–Dec)
The BIR calendar tax year on one printable page — colour-coded quarters.
Open →
Frequently asked questions
Which holidays are marked?
Both kinds from the annual presidential proclamation: the regular holidays (New Year's Day, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Araw ng Kagitingan, Labor Day, Independence Day, National Heroes Day, Bonifacio Day, Christmas Day, Rizal Day, plus the proclaimed Eid'l Fitr and Eid'l Adha) and the special non-working days (Chinese New Year, Black Saturday, Ninoy Aquino Day, All Saints' and All Souls' Day, the Immaculate Conception, Christmas Eve and the Last Day of the Year).
What's the difference between a regular holiday and a special non-working day?
Pay rules, mainly. On a regular holiday, employees generally receive 100% of their wage even without working (200% if they work). On a special non-working day, the 'no work, no pay' principle applies unless company policy says otherwise, and working earns an extra 30%. The calendar marks both kinds; your HR or DOLE guidance governs the pay treatment.
Why isn't the EDSA People Power Anniversary marked?
Because in recent years it has been declared a special WORKING day — an ordinary work day with no premium pay — rather than a day off. Its status has changed several times (special non-working in 2023, ordinary in 2024, special working in 2025 and 2026), so we follow each year's proclamation exactly. If a future proclamation makes it non-working again, it will appear.
Can I make the calendar in Filipino?
Yes — choose Filipino (Tagalog) from the dropdown and the month names (Enero…Disyembre), weekday headers (Lin, Lun, Mar…) and holiday names (Araw ng Bagong Taon, Huwebes Santo, Araw ng mga Bayani, Bisperas ng Pasko) all print in Filipino. Araw ng Kagitingan and Eid'l Fitr/Adha are official in both languages.
How do Eid'l Fitr and Eid'l Adha get their dates?
They follow the Islamic lunar calendar, so Malacañang issues a separate proclamation for each once the date is determined — usually a few weeks before the feast. We add them as soon as they're proclaimed; until then they simply aren't printed, rather than guessed.
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. Type your event, then save — no paid software needed. Prints on A4 or US Letter.
Updated through July 2026
