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The 12 US States Where Good Friday Is A Holiday

Last Updated: March 30, 2026 Leave a Comment

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US States & Canadian Provinces Where Good Friday Is A Holiday

The map above shows the 12 states where Good Friday is a state holiday as well as being holiday in all 10 Canadians provinces and 3 territories.

The 12 states are:

  1. Connecticut
  2. Delaware
  3. Florida
  4. Hawaii
  5. Indiana
  6. Kentucky
  7. Louisiana
  8. New Jersey
  9. North Carolina
  10. North Dakota
  11. Tennessee
  12. Texas *Optional holiday

I find it very interesting that in a country where 69% of people identify as Christian, Easter is not a Federal Holiday. I thought this may be due to the separation between Church and state but that does not explain why Christmas is a Federal Holiday.

Here’s what ChatGPT has to day about it:

Easter isn’t a U.S. federal holiday mainly because of how the U.S. government handles religion and public holidays.

Here are the key reasons:

  1. Separation of church and state

The United States follows the principle of separation of church and state (from the First Amendment).
Easter is a Christian religious holiday, so making it a federal holiday could be seen as the government endorsing one religion over others.

  1. Federal holidays are mostly secular (or broadly cultural)

Most U.S. federal holidays are either:

  • Secular/national (like Independence Day, Labor Day), or
  • Culturally widespread but not strictly religious in law (like Christmas, which has become heavily secularized)

Easter, unlike Christmas, is:

  • More explicitly religious
  • Less universally celebrated across all Americans
  1. It falls on a Sunday

Easter is always celebrated on a Sunday, and:

  • Many federal employees already don’t work Sundays
  • So making it a federal holiday wouldn’t change much operationally
  1. Religious diversity

The U.S. is religiously diverse (Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, non-religious, etc.).
If Easter were made a federal holiday, it could raise questions like:

  • Why not holidays from other religions too?

Quick comparison

  • Christmas → Federal holiday (but widely secular + cultural)
  • Easter → Not federal (more strictly religious + always Sunday)

Here’s how Christmas ended up with that status:

Christmas became culturally “American,” not just religious

By the 1800s, Christmas in the U.S. had evolved beyond a purely Christian observance into a broad cultural holiday.

Influences included:

  • Charles Dickens: helped popularize themes of generosity, family, and goodwill
  • Thomas Nast: shaped the modern image of Santa Claus
  • German and Dutch traditions (trees, gift-giving, St. Nicholas)

The result: Christmas became something even non-religious Americans participated in.

It was officially made a federal holiday in 1870

Christmas was declared a federal holiday by the U.S. Congress in 1870, during a period of national rebuilding after the Civil War.

Key point:

  • It was framed less as a religious endorsement and more as a unifying national celebration

Strong commercial and social adoption

Over time, Christmas became deeply tied to:

  • Gift-giving 🎁
  • Retail and the economy
  • Family gatherings

This made it:

  • Economically significant
  • Socially universal

Easter never developed this same level of nationwide commercial importance.

Easter stayed more strictly religious

Easter is central to Christianity (arguably more important theologically than Christmas), but:

  • It remained focused on church observance
  • Its secular elements (eggs, bunnies) are lighter and less universal
  • It lacks the same cultural takeover that Christmas achieved

Timing matters (Sunday issue again)

Easter always falls on a Sunday, which:

  • Reduces the need for an official day off
  • Limits pressure to make it a federal holiday

Christmas, by contrast:

  • Falls on a fixed date (Dec 25)
  • Often lands on a weekday → making a federal holiday more practical

Ok but why not Good Friday a Holiday?

Good Friday commemorates the crucifixion of Jesus, which is:

  • One of the most solemn and specifically Christian observances
  • Less “culturally adaptable” than Christmas

Unlike Christmas, there’s almost no secular version of Good Friday.

So making it a federal holiday would raise stronger concerns about:

  • Government endorsing a specific religion

The U.S. avoids picking one religion’s sacred days

If Good Friday became a federal holiday, it would open the door to questions like:

  • Why not Jewish holidays like Yom Kippur?
  • Why not Muslim holidays like Eid?
  • Why not Hindu festivals like Diwali?

Because the U.S. is highly religiously diverse, the government generally avoids:

Officially recognizing religious observances as national holidays

Federal holidays are about shared civic life

U.S. federal holidays usually mark:

  • National identity (Independence Day)
  • Civic values (Labor Day, MLK Day)
  • Broad cultural traditions (Thanksgiving, Christmas)

Good Friday doesn’t really fit those categories, it’s:

  • A theological event, not a civic one

Why countries like the UK do have it

Countries such as the UK historically had:

  • Established Christian churches (e.g. Church of England)
  • Less strict separation of church and state

So Good Friday became embedded as a national holiday long ago.

It is a holiday in some U.S. states

Interesting twist: it’s not totally ignored.

Some states do observe Good Friday as a holiday or partial holiday, including: all the states mentioned above,  so at a local level, there’s more flexibility than at the federal level.

Here is where Easter is Celebrated as a holiday:

Where Easter is celebrated as a holiday

Credit World In Maps

and here’s another version of the map:

Easter is a public holiday

Map created by Dodi Maps

Do you celebrate Easter where you live?

Filed Under: Americas

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