South Africans could get an extra day off, depending on whether President Cyril Ramaphosa declares the 2026 local government elections a national public holiday.
The country officially has 12 public holidays each year, but the real number of days off varies depending on how the calendar falls.
The annual holiday calendar starts with New Year’s Day on 1 January and ends with the Day of Goodwill on 26 December.
Along the way are globally recognised dates such as International Workers’ Day on 1 May, Christmas Day on 25 December and the Easter period.
However, we also include uniquely South African holidays such as Human Rights Day, Freedom Day, Youth Day, National Women’s Day, Heritage Day and the Day of Reconciliation.
The day on which these holidays fall moves each year. The Easter weekend—determined according to the ecclesiastical moon—shifts between late March and late April.
In 2026, it falls from Friday, 3 April to Monday, 6 April, giving the typical long weekend many workers expect.
However, the Public Holidays Act (Act No. 36 of 1994) determines whether those holidays actually translate into extra time off.
If a public holiday lands on a weekday, most employees automatically receive the day off. If it falls on a Sunday, the following Monday becomes a public holiday instead.
However, the law does not grant a replacement day if a public holiday falls on a Saturday, meaning workers who do not normally work Saturdays effectively lose the benefit.
This will happen twice in 2026. Human Rights Day on 21 March and the Day of Goodwill on 26 December both fall on a Saturday.
For many employees, those holidays exist only on paper. This is where the upcoming local government elections could change things.
The next municipal elections must take place between 2 November 2026 and 1 February 2027. By law, voting must occur within 90 days of municipal councils reaching the end of their five-year term on 1 November 2026.
The President has declared local government elections a public holiday before

The exact polling date must still be announced by the Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs in consultation with the Electoral Commission of South Africa.
Once a date is set, the President has the authority to declare it a public holiday. Section 2A of the Public Holidays Act allows the President to proclaim any day a holiday nationwide.
The process starts with officially proclaiming the election date under the Constitution and electoral legislation, then issuing a second proclamation in the Government Gazette declaring that day a holiday.
In 2021, President Cyril Ramaphosa declared Monday, 1 November 202 —the local government election date—a public holiday across the country.
He also urged employers to make provision for workers to exercise their constitutional right to vote.
If the same approach is followed in the upcoming election cycle, South Africans would gain an additional day off, offsetting at least one of the calendar losses caused by weekend holidays in 2026.
The prospect of another public holiday often sparks debate about the economic impact. Many manufacturers and industrial firms argue that production disruptions cost money and reduce output.
However, research has shown that time off can reduce burnout, improve mental health and ultimately raise productivity in the long term.
Public holidays also tend to increase spending across the economy. Long weekends encourage domestic travel, restaurant visits and leisure activities.
Statistics South Africa has previously found holidays during busy seasons increase spending at hotels, restaurants and tourist attractions, supporting local economies.
