week.

How many weeks are in a year?

A quick question with a surprisingly exact answer — and an occasional twist. Here's the short version, the rule behind it, a reference table for every year from 2020 to 2040, and why the difference between a 52- and 53-week year quietly matters.

A calendar year has 52 weeks — almost always.

More precisely, 365 days is 52 weeks and 1 day, and a leap year adds a second spare day. Those leftover days accumulate, so under the ISO 8601 week system some years stretch to a 53rd week to keep weeks whole and aligned to Mondays.

The rule for 52 vs 53 weeks

The ISO 8601 week system has two rules: every week starts on Monday, and week 1 is the week containing the year's first Thursday (equivalently, the week with January 4th in it). Because weeks are whole Monday-to-Sunday blocks, a year occasionally needs a 53rd week to cover all its days. That happens in exactly two cases:

  • 1 January is a Thursday — e.g. 2026 and 2037, or
  • 1 January is a Wednesday and it's a leap year — e.g. 2020 and 2032.

Every other year has 52 weeks. That's roughly 71 years in every 400 that carry a 53rd week — about once every five or six years.

Weeks in each year, 2020–2040

The full count for every year in the range, with the dates of week 1. The rows are the 53-week years.

YearISO weeksWeek 1 (Mon – Sun)
20205330 Dec 2019 – 5 Jan 2020
2021524 Jan 2021 – 10 Jan 2021
2022523 Jan 2022 – 9 Jan 2022
2023522 Jan 2023 – 8 Jan 2023
2024521 Jan 2024 – 7 Jan 2024
20255230 Dec 2024 – 5 Jan 2025
20265329 Dec 2025 – 4 Jan 2026
2027524 Jan 2027 – 10 Jan 2027
2028523 Jan 2028 – 9 Jan 2028
2029521 Jan 2029 – 7 Jan 2029
20305231 Dec 2029 – 6 Jan 2030
20315230 Dec 2030 – 5 Jan 2031
20325329 Dec 2031 – 4 Jan 2032
2033523 Jan 2033 – 9 Jan 2033
2034522 Jan 2034 – 8 Jan 2034
2035521 Jan 2035 – 7 Jan 2035
20365231 Dec 2035 – 6 Jan 2036
20375329 Dec 2036 – 4 Jan 2037
2038524 Jan 2038 – 10 Jan 2038
2039523 Jan 2039 – 9 Jan 2039
2040522 Jan 2040 – 8 Jan 2040

In this range the 53-week years are 2020, 2026, 2032, 2037. Note that week 1 often begins in late December of the previous year — that's normal, because the first Monday-to-Sunday week of the year can start before 1 January.

Why the 53rd week matters

For most people the difference is invisible. For some it's a recurring headache:

  • Payroll. Organisations that pay weekly or fortnightly occasionally hit a year with an extra pay period — a "53-week year" or "27th fortnight" — which has to be handled deliberately so annual salaries and tax come out right.
  • Retail & finance. Companies on a 4-4-5 or 13-week-quarter calendar add an extra week roughly every five to six years to resync with the real calendar; that "53-week year" makes year-on-year comparisons tricky.
  • Planning & scheduling. Anyone running a project or rota by week number needs to know whether they're working with 52 or 53 slots before the year turns.

How many working weeks?

If you mean weeks spent at work rather than weeks on the calendar, the figure is smaller. Subtract annual leave and public holidays — typically four to six weeks in much of Europe — and a 52-week year usually leaves around 46–48 working weeks. The exact number depends on your contract and country, so it's best counted directly.

Look up a specific year or date

Want the full week-by-week breakdown for one year? See the week number calendar, which lists every ISO week with its dates and lets you switch years. To find the week number for one exact date or check how far through a quarter you are, use the calculators on the week.hako.to home page. You can also read up on the four calendar quarters or how to count business days between two dates. Curious whether a given year has a leap day? See is 2026 a leap year.

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All counts follow ISO 8601. The table is fixed reference data — nothing on this page is sent anywhere.