Few things help you recharge, or plan a getaway, like knowing the UAE public holidays 2026 in advance. With the first half of the year behind us, the calendar still holds several days off, including a standout stretch in early December. Here is the full rundown for the rest of the year, how the public and private sectors differ, and how to turn these dates into long weekends.
What’s left on the 2026 calendar
The remaining public holidays for 2026 centre on a handful of occasions in the second half of the year. Islamic dates depend on the official moon sighting, so the exact days are confirmed by the government shortly beforehand, but the expected line-up is:
- Islamic New Year (Hijri New Year): observed around Tuesday 16 June, the one-day holiday that opened the second half of the year
- Prophet Muhammad’s Birthday (Mawlid): expected on Tuesday 25 August, with the day off potentially shifted to ease the working week
- Commemoration Day: Tuesday 1 December
- UAE National Day (Eid Al Etihad): Wednesday 2 and Thursday 3 December
All of these apply to both the public and private sectors, so the vast majority of residents share the same days off.
Commemoration Day: the meaning behind the date
Commemoration Day, on 1 December, honours the Emiratis who gave their lives in service of the nation. It is a moment of national pride and reflection rather than festivity, marked by a moment of silence and ceremonies across the country. For many workers it also signals the start of the most celebrated stretch of the UAE calendar.
UAE National Day: the highlight of the year
National Day, known as Eid Al Etihad, celebrates the founding of the union in 1971 and falls on 2 to 3 December 2026. Expect fireworks, air shows, light displays and festivals from the Corniche in Abu Dhabi to Dubai’s waterfronts. It is one of the busiest and most joyful periods for tourism and retail, the same energy that helped draw more than 10 million visitors to Dubai in early 2026.
Public vs private sector: what’s the difference?
For national holidays such as Commemoration Day and National Day, the public and private sectors in the UAE now enjoy the same days off, a deliberate move to align the country’s working calendar. The differences are subtle:
- Announcements: federal government bodies and the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation (MOHRE) confirm the dates separately, though they almost always match.
- Adjustments: when a holiday falls mid-week, authorities sometimes move it to a Monday or Thursday to create a longer break, more common for the public sector but frequently extended to private firms too.
- Shift and retail work: employees who work on a public holiday are entitled to compensation under UAE labour law, either a day off in lieu or extra pay.
Turning holidays into long weekends
The December cluster is the prize of the 2026 calendar. With Commemoration Day on Tuesday 1 December and National Day on Wednesday and Thursday 2 to 3 December, booking a single day of annual leave on Monday 30 November links the preceding weekend to all three holidays, potentially a five-day break. The following Friday and Saturday weekend can stretch it even further for those who plan ahead.
August’s Mawlid holiday offers a similar trick: a well-placed day of leave around the Tuesday can create a four-day escape just before the autumn season begins. Because the UAE works a Saturday-Sunday weekend, holidays that land on a Sunday or Thursday naturally extend the break without using any leave at all.
How the holidays fit the wider year
The second-half breaks round off a calendar that already delivered generous time off earlier in 2026, including the New Year’s Day holiday in January and the Eid Al Fitr and Eid Al Adha breaks in spring. For families, the December cluster is the natural moment for a longer trip, as it sits close to school winter breaks and the cooler weather that draws visitors to the region. For businesses, it is worth pencilling these dates into project plans now: many offices run at reduced capacity through the National Day period, and suppliers across the GCC observe overlapping breaks. Confirming the exact days as soon as the government announces them keeps travel bookings, payroll and client deadlines on track.
Plan ahead and make it count
Long weekends are perfect for exploring the wider region or simply relaxing at home without burning through annual leave. Travellers should book early, as flights and hotels fill fast around National Day. If you are budgeting for staycations or short trips, our UAE cost of living breakdown helps you plan spending, while newcomers settling into the rhythm of UAE work life can get oriented with our guide to finding a job in Dubai. Employers, meanwhile, can keep leave and holiday pay compliant using our UAE hiring guide. Mark these dates now, and the rest of 2026 has plenty of well-earned time off in store.



