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US Holidays 2010 — Dates, Weekdays & Countdowns

All 11 US federal holidays and major observances in 2010: the exact date, the day of the week, the federally observed date, and a live countdown to each.

Federal holidays 2010
HolidayDateDay of weekObservedCountdown
New Year's DayJanuary 1, 2010Fridaypassed
Martin Luther King Jr. DayJanuary 18, 2010Mondaypassed
Presidents' DayFebruary 15, 2010Mondaypassed
Memorial DayMay 31, 2010Mondaypassed
JuneteenthJune 19, 2010SaturdayJune 18, 2010passed
Independence DayJuly 4, 2010SundayJuly 5, 2010passed
Labor DaySeptember 6, 2010Mondaypassed
Columbus DayOctober 11, 2010Mondaypassed
Veterans DayNovember 11, 2010Thursdaypassed
ThanksgivingNovember 25, 2010Thursdaypassed
Christmas DayDecember 25, 2010SaturdayDecember 24, 2010passed

When a fixed-date federal holiday falls on a Saturday it is observed the Friday before; on a Sunday, the Monday after. Monday-rule holidays (like Memorial Day or Labor Day) never need an observed date.

Other major observances 2010
HolidayDateDay of weekCountdown
Valentine's DayFebruary 14, 2010Sundaypassed
Mother's DayMay 9, 2010Sundaypassed
Father's DayJune 20, 2010Sundaypassed
HalloweenOctober 31, 2010Sundaypassed
New Year's EveDecember 31, 2010Fridaypassed
Holiday Calendar Frequently Asked Questions

How many federal holidays are there in 2010?

There are 11 US federal holidays in 2010: New Year's Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Presidents' Day, Memorial Day, Juneteenth, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas Day.

When is Thanksgiving 2010?

Thanksgiving 2010 falls on Thursday, November 25, 2010 — the fourth Thursday of November, as set by federal law.

What does the "observed" date mean?

When a fixed-date federal holiday lands on a weekend, federal employees get the nearest weekday off instead: the Friday before if it falls on Saturday, or the Monday after if it falls on Sunday. That weekday is the observed date; the holiday itself does not move.