Skyscraper in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, under a Full Moon.
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam: A destination for your next Full Moon holiday?
© iStockphoto.com/Khoa Nguyen

Wouldn’t it be interesting to find a list of all holidays under a Full Moon * in 2025? It might give you a reason to celebrate your favorite holiday bathed in silver light, with a dinner or an evening walk. But where to find such a list?

All you need is a database of international holidays and a service that shows you all Moon phases for every location on Earth.

Luckily, mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev offers both accurate holiday and astronomic data. We checked it out for you and looked at all the holidays, observances, and commemorations around the world that coincide with a Moon that is at least 98% lit up.

We like to call these special days Full Moon holidays. Let’s have a look at some of the lunar highlights of the 2025 holiday calendar.

A Moonlit Mother’s Day

Mother’s Day comes with a cosmic companion in 2025.

Published:

In the Moonlight: Lovers, Mothers, Presidents

In 2025, a bright Moon shines on 486 holidays and observances around the world. You’ll find a longer list at the end of this article; here are three of our favorite Full Moon holidays this year.

1. Valentine’s Day in New Zealand (February 14, 2025)

Romance shines even brighter this Valentine’s Day in New Zealand, as couples celebrate under a Full Moon. Many take advantage of the Southern Hemisphere’s summer warmth, making the most of the magical moonlit evening. Illumination: 99.0%

2. Thomas Jefferson’s Birthday in the US (April 13, 2025)

While the third US president and principal author of the Declaration of Independence did not receive a federal holiday, he will have a Full Moon shining on his 282nd birthday. And Jefferson is not the only President with a Full Moon birthday: Abraham Lincoln’s birthday (February 12) is bathed in bright moonlight this year as well. Illumination: 99.9%

3. Mothers’ Day in Puerto Rico (May 11, 2025)

Families in Puerto Rico celebrate Mothers’ Day with heartfelt gatherings, delicious home-cooked meals, and expressions of gratitude for maternal love and care. Many enjoy outdoor festivities, from beach picnics to moonlit serenades, making this year’s moonlit celebration even more special. Illumination: 99.6%

Full Moon Holidays: Accident or Design?

How rare are holidays that fall on a Full Moon? We had a closer look at our holiday database and found that in 2025, only 486 out of 6990 holidays in the mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev database fall on a Full Moon (6.95%). The majority of these are what we call accidental Full Moon holidays.

An accidental Full Moon holiday is a holiday or observance with a fixed date, such as Election Day (USA), that happens to coincide with a brightly illuminated Moon in a given year.

Explore our holiday database

Designed Full Moon Holidays

Not all Full Moon holidays are accidents: Roughly every third holiday in our database falls on a Full Moon date every year. No wonder, because many religions celebrate important days by following the Moon’s phases: Christians set the date for Easter using the Full Moon in spring, Jewish holidays often start on a Full Moon, and Islamic months start when the Moon becomes visible again after a New Moon.

Chuseok: The Full Moon traffic chaos holiday

Full Moon Holidays 2025

Name Country Date Illumination
Orthodox New Year Ukraine 14 Jan 2025 99.8
Pongal India 14 Jan 2025 99.8
Lincoln's Birthday United States 12 Feb 2025 99.8
Tu Bishvat Israel 13 Feb 2025 99.8
Valentine's Day New Zealand 14 Feb 2025 99.0
Full Moon Day of Tabaung Myanmar 13 Mar 2025 99.7
Mothers' Day San Marino 15 Mar 2025 99.5
International Day of Human Space Flight United States 12 Apr 2025 99.4
God of Medicine's Birthday Taiwan 12 Apr 2025 99.9
Thomas Jefferson's Birthday United States 13 Apr 2025 99.9
Lao New Year Laos 13 Apr 2025 99.7
Mothers' Day Puerto Rico 11 May 2025 99.6
Buddha Purnima/Vesak Bangladesh 11 May 2025 99.0
Fathers' Day Romania 11 May 2025 98.1
Whit Monday Germany 09 Jun 2025 98.0
Poson Full Moon Poya Day Sri Lanka 10 Jun 2025 99.5
Kamehameha Day United States 11 Jun 2025 99.8
Science Day Turkmenistan 12 Jun 2025 99.5
Independence Day The Bahamas 10 Jul 2025 99.4
Asalha Bucha Thailand 10 Jul 2025 99.1
Naadam (National Day) Mongolia 11 Jul 2025 99.8
Father's Day Taiwan 08 Aug 2025 99.4
International Day of the World's Indigenous People United States 09 Aug 2025 99.9
Feast of Saint Roman Monaco 09 Aug 2025 99.8
Spirit Festival China 06 Sep 2025 98.4
Fathers' Day Australia 07 Sep 2025 100.0
Nativity of Mary Lebanon 08 Sep 2025 100.0
Thanksgiving Day Saint Lucia 06 Oct 2025 100.0
Chuseok South Korea 06 Oct 2025 99.6
First day of Sukkot Canada 07 Oct 2025 100.0
Election Day United States 04 Nov 2025 99.7
National Symbols Day Panama 04 Nov 2025 99.7
Guy Fawkes Day United Kingdom 05 Nov 2025 99.45
St Nicholas' Eve/Sinterklaas Netherlands 05 Dec 2025 99.8
King Bhumibol's Birthday/Father's Day Thailand 05 Dec 2025 99.3
Gospel Day Marshall Islands 05 Dec 2025 99.4
Close-up shot of the rising Full Moon
The Moon rising over Tucson, Arizona, USA. Is it 99.6% illuminated? Or just 98.1%?
© mungfali.galihkartiwa07.workers.dev

*Full Moon Illumination: What Does “Full” Mean?

As described above, for the purpose of finding holidays basked in moonlight, we define a Full Moon as at least 98% illuminated. But our article about the Full Moon phase explains that “the Full Moon is when the Sun and the Moon are aligned on opposite sides of Earth, and approximately 100% of the Moon’s face is illuminated by the Sun.” So, which one is it?

Can the Moon really be called full when it is less than 100% illuminated?

The answer is yes. In effect, astronomers already allow for a slight deviation of 0.2%, so a Moon with 99.8% illumination does not lose its status as a Full Moon. So it doesn’t have to be 100%. But how much lower than 99.8% can we go and still call it a Full Moon?

What are astronomical holidays?

This is where we leave the accuracy of calculations and touch the realm of our senses: The human eye can’t easily detect a difference between a Moon that is 98% illuminated and one that is 100% lit up. In practice, they look the same.

In other words, for a human watching from Earth, an illumination of 98% looks like a Full Moon.

This is why we talk about “holidays under a Full Moon” with some additional explanation. It is the intersection of science and culture, of measurement and experience. There is a little wiggle room.