Hebrew to Gregorian Converter
Convert Hebrew (Jewish) calendar dates to Gregorian and vice versa, handling leap-month years automatically.
Hebrew ↔ Gregorian
Convert in either direction. Toggle the arrow to switch.
Hebrew ↔ Gregorian conversion
The Hebrew calendar is a lunisolar calendar — months follow the moon, but an extra leap month is inserted 7 times in every 19-year cycle to keep festivals aligned with the seasons. This makes exact conversion mathematically complex, but our calculator handles it correctly for any date.
Leap years and Adar
In a Hebrew leap year, the month of Adar becomes two months — Adar I and Adar II. Adar I is the leap month (30 days); Adar II is the "real" Adar where festivals like Purim are observed. The converter above knows which years are leap years and handles the month naming automatically.
Days begin at sundown
A Hebrew day begins at sundown, not midnight. This is why Jewish holidays are often described as beginning "the evening of" a given Gregorian date. For date conversion, this page uses the convention that a Gregorian day maps to the Hebrew date that runs from the previous sundown to that day's sundown — the standard mapping used in most calendar software.
Common Hebrew dates in 5786
| Hebrew date | Gregorian | Observance |
|---|---|---|
| 1 Tishrei 5786 | 22 Sep 2025 | Rosh Hashanah |
| 10 Tishrei 5786 | 1 Oct 2025 | Yom Kippur |
| 15 Tishrei 5786 | 6 Oct 2025 | Sukkot begins |
| 25 Kislev 5786 | 14 Dec 2025 | Hanukkah begins |
| 14 Adar 5786 | 2 Mar 2026 | Purim |
| 15 Nisan 5786 | 1 Apr 2026 | Passover begins |
| 6 Sivan 5786 | 21 May 2026 | Shavuot |
Hebrew calendar quirks worth knowing
The Hebrew calendar has several subtleties that can catch Gregorian-trained users off guard:
- Days begin at sundown. Hebrew Monday actually starts on Gregorian Sunday evening. This means Jewish holidays span two Gregorian dates.
- Leap year adds a month, not a day. Unlike Gregorian leap years (which add 29 February), Hebrew leap years add a whole extra month: Adar I, before the regular Adar (now called Adar II).
- The year number increments in Tishrei, not Nisan. Even though Nisan is called the "first month" in religious tradition, the civil year increments on 1 Tishrei (Rosh Hashanah) six months later.
- Purim moves to Adar II in leap years. So in some years Purim is in February (Gregorian), in others it's in March.
Finding a Hebrew birthday in the Gregorian calendar
Your Hebrew birthday slips around the Gregorian year — up to a month in either direction. To find when your Hebrew birthday falls in a specific Gregorian year:
- Enter your Hebrew birth date (day, month, year) in the converter above.
- Select "Hebrew → Gregorian."
- Iterate through target Hebrew years (5786, 5787, 5788…) to see when your Hebrew birthday falls in each.
Special case: if you were born in Adar of a non-leap year, your birthday in a leap year can be observed either on Adar I (symbolic date) or Adar II (same month name) — traditions vary. Consult your community.
Major Hebrew holidays and their Gregorian dates through 5790
| Holiday | Hebrew date | 5786 (2025–26) | 5787 (2026–27) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rosh Hashanah | 1 Tishrei | 22 Sep 2025 | 12 Sep 2026 |
| Yom Kippur | 10 Tishrei | 1 Oct 2025 | 21 Sep 2026 |
| Sukkot | 15 Tishrei | 6 Oct 2025 | 26 Sep 2026 |
| Hanukkah | 25 Kislev | 14 Dec 2025 | 4 Dec 2026 |
| Purim | 14 Adar / Adar II | 2 Mar 2026 | 21 Feb 2027 |
| Passover | 15 Nisan | 1 Apr 2026 | 21 Apr 2027 |
| Shavuot | 6 Sivan | 21 May 2026 | 10 Jun 2027 |
5786 is a leap year
The current Hebrew year (5786 AM) is a leap year — the 19-year cycle's 19th year, always a leap year. It contains 13 months including Adar I (inserted before the normal Adar, which is renamed Adar II). The next Hebrew leap year is 5789.