How Juneteenth appears on school calendars
Juneteenth is observed on June 19 and is treated as a no-school day by virtually all US public K-12 districts and the majority of US universities. When the date falls on a Saturday or Sunday, the federal observance shifts to the nearest weekday, and most school districts shift their closure with it.
For families planning around Juneteenth, the practical rule is that any school-week holiday creates a long-weekend planning opportunity — for travel, family visits, or simply a reset between intense academic stretches. Universities running summer or intersession programs will typically schedule a single-day closure even when their main calendar is paused.
Planning impact
Holidays that fall mid-week (especially Independence Day and Christmas) often anchor longer breaks around them — schools may add a day before or after to bridge with a weekend, particularly when the holiday falls on a Tuesday or Thursday. Federal holidays that always fall on Mondays (Labor Day, MLK Day, Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Columbus Day) automatically produce three-day weekends.
K-12 districts almost always close on every federal holiday, and frequently add state-recognized days. Universities are more variable — some treat MLK Day or Veterans Day as instructional days while still observing the holiday administratively. Always check your specific institution's published calendar before relying on a holiday closure.
Templates that already include this date
Every full-year and semester calendar template on AcademicCalPro includes the standard set of federal holidays, including Juneteenth. Use the editable Word, Excel, or Google Sheets versions to adjust the date if you are working with a previous or future year.