What Are Business Days?

"Please allow 3–5 business days for delivery." "The refund will post within 2 business days." "You have 10 business days to respond." These phrases show up on shipping pages, bank notices, and legal letters constantly, yet the actual date they point to depends entirely on which day the clock started, how many weekends sit in between, and whether a public holiday quietly eats one of the days.

A "business day" sounds simple until it's the thing standing between "did this arrive late" and "this is exactly on schedule." This guide covers what actually counts as one, why the definition trips people up, and how to count them correctly by hand or with a tool.

Quick Answer

A business day is any weekday, Monday through Friday, that isn't a recognized public holiday. Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays like New Year's Day or Christmas don't count. So "3 business days" from a Thursday means Friday, Monday, and Tuesday, not Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, since the weekend doesn't move the count forward at all.

What is a business day, exactly?

A business day is a day on which normal business operations run — typically Monday through Friday, from roughly 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in a given time zone. Two categories of days get excluded from the count no matter how it's phrased:

Everything else — the ordinary Monday-through-Friday grid, minus those holiday dates — counts as a business day. The term "working day" is used interchangeably with "business day" in almost every context.

Why the business-day definition matters

The gap between a calendar day and a business day isn't just semantics — it changes real dates in a few common situations:

📊 Quick stat Out of every 7 calendar days, only 5 are business days in a standard Monday–Friday week — meaning any deadline phrased "in business days" is, on average, roughly two-sevenths longer in calendar time than the number alone suggests, before holidays are even factored in.

Step-by-step: counting business days by hand

Method 1: Counting forward from a start date

  1. Identify the start date. Decide whether the start date itself counts as day one, or whether counting begins the following day — this is usually stated explicitly in the deadline wording.
  2. Move forward one weekday at a time. Step through each following calendar day, counting it only if it's a Monday through Friday.
  3. Skip weekends automatically. If a Saturday or Sunday falls in the sequence, skip it without adding to the count.
  4. Skip any public holidays in the range. Cross-check the date range against a holiday calendar for the relevant country, and skip any weekday that falls on one.
  5. Stop once the target number of business days is reached. The date you land on is the deadline or delivery date.

Method 2: Total business days between two known dates

  1. Count the total calendar days between the two dates. This gives the full span before any exclusions.
  2. Subtract the weekend days in that range. A full week always contains exactly two weekend days, so partial weeks need to be checked individually.
  3. Subtract any public holidays that fall on a weekday within the range. Only holidays landing on a weekday reduce the count further; a holiday that falls on a weekend has already been excluded.
Don't want to count by hand? Rebrixe's free Business Days Calculator counts weekends and holidays automatically.
Calculate Business Days →

Common mistakes when counting business days

1. Ignoring public holidays entirely

Weekends are easy to remember, but a holiday landing mid-week is easy to miss, and it quietly pushes a "5 business day" deadline out by an extra calendar day.

2. Getting inclusive vs exclusive start dates wrong

Whether the count includes the starting day or begins the day after is a common source of off-by-one errors, and it changes the final date without any obvious sign that something went wrong.

3. Assuming the same weekend everywhere

Saturday and Sunday are the standard weekend in most of the world, but several countries use a Friday–Saturday or Thursday–Friday weekend instead, which shifts which days count as business days for any international deadline.

4. Treating a company's operating hours as the business-day definition

A store that's open on Saturday doesn't make Saturday a business day for shipping, banking, or legal purposes — those definitions follow the standard weekday calendar regardless of which hours a specific location happens to be staffed.

💡 Pro tip When a deadline says "business days," always check the holiday calendar for the specific country — and specific region, if it varies locally — that the deadline applies to, rather than assuming a global holiday list.

Real-world examples

A few common scenarios and how the business-day count plays out in each one.

Online order
"3–5 business days" shipping
Thu → next Wed
An order placed Thursday with a 5 business day estimate arrives the following Wednesday, since the weekend in between doesn't count.
Bank transfer
"2 business day" processing
Fri → Tue
A transfer submitted Friday afternoon typically posts by Tuesday, since Saturday and Sunday don't count toward the 2-day window.
Legal notice
"10 business day" response window
2 calendar weeks
A 10 business day deadline spans two full weekends, so it lands two calendar weeks after the start date, longer if a holiday falls inside it.
Holiday collision
Deadline pushed by a holiday
+1 extra day
A "3 business day" window that includes a Monday public holiday effectively stretches to four calendar weekdays.

Business days vs calendar days vs working days

These three terms get used loosely, but they don't all mean the same thing.

Factor Calendar days Business days Working days
Includes weekends Yes, always No No
Includes public holidays Yes, always No No
Days per standard week 7 5 5 (or the local equivalent)
Best for Contract terms measured strictly in days Shipping, banking, legal deadlines Payroll, scheduling, HR policies

Skip the manual count: free business days calculator

If a deadline or delivery date needs to be exact, the Rebrixe Business Days Calculator does the counting automatically: pick a start date, enter how many business days to add, and it accounts for weekends without any manual tallying. No account, no formulas, nothing sent anywhere.

Free Business Days Calculator Enter a date and a count, get the exact business-day result instantly.
Open Business Days Calculator →

Frequently asked questions

A business day is any weekday, Monday through Friday, that isn't a recognized public holiday, which in most countries leaves out Saturdays, Sundays, and a handful of fixed holiday dates each year.
Yes, the two terms are generally used interchangeably to mean the same thing: a standard weekday that isn't a weekend or holiday, though some industries with non-standard schedules define their own working-day calendar.
A standard week has five business days, Monday through Friday, since Saturday and Sunday are excluded as weekend days in most countries.
This depends entirely on how the count is phrased; "5 business days from Monday" typically excludes Monday itself and counts forward, so getting this inclusive-versus-exclusive detail wrong is one of the most common counting mistakes.
Yes, while the Monday-to-Friday structure is common worldwide, the specific public holidays excluded from the count vary by country and even by region, so an international deadline needs the right holiday calendar for that location.
Count the total calendar days between the two dates, subtract any weekend days that fall in that range, and then subtract any public holidays that also fall within the range, or use a calculator or spreadsheet function that automates the same logic.
If the count starts right before a weekend or a public holiday, those non-business days sit inside the window without adding to the count, so three business days can stretch across five or more calendar days.

Get the exact date, no manual counting

Skip the weekend-and-holiday math entirely — the Rebrixe Business Days Calculator handles it for you in seconds.

Launch the Business Days Calculator →
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