Public holidays in Malaysia explained

Public holidays in Malaysia are regulated at both federal and state levels, mainly based on a list of federal holidays observed nationwide plus a few additional holidays observed by each individual state and federal territory. The public holidays are a mix of secular holidays celebrating the nation and its history, and selected traditional holidays of the various ethnic and religious groups that make up the country.

The legislation governing public holidays in Malaysia includes the Holidays Act 1951 (Act 369) in Peninsular Malaysia and Labuan, the Holidays Ordinance (Sabah Cap. 56) in Sabah and the Public Holidays Ordinance (Sarawak Cap. 8) in Sarawak.

The workweek and weekend varies between states, with most states and federal territories observing a Saturday - Sunday weekend, while Johor, Kedah, Kelantan and Terengganu observe a Friday - Saturday weekend, though in Johor many private businesses and banks observe the Saturday - Sunday weekend due to close business ties with Singapore.[1] [2] In states and territories with a Saturday - Sunday weekend, a public holiday that falls on Sunday is substituted by a holiday on Monday, or the next working day if Monday itself is a public holiday. In Johor and Kedah, a public holiday that falls on Friday is replaced by Sunday or the next working day, while in Kelantan and Terengganu, a public holiday that falls on Saturday is replaced by Sunday or the next working day.

Overview

Federal holidays

Federal public holidays are fixed by the federal government and are observed nationwide with some exceptions. They are:

Each state and federal territory observes 14 days of federal holidays, except Sarawak which observes 13 days.

Although the second day of Chinese New Year is not listed as a federal holiday in Kelantan and Terengganu, the holiday is gazetted as a state holiday in both states, effectively making it a nationwide holiday. Additionally, the second day of Hari Raya Qurban is gazetted as a state holiday in Kedah and Perlis.

State holidays

In addition to the federal public holidays, each state may gazette a number of state public holidays to be observed in the state. For the federal territories, the Prime Minister is in charge of designating the territorial public holidays to be observed in each federal territory.

In every state, the official birthday of the state ruler or governor is celebrated as a public holiday. In the federal territories, the Federal Territory Day is celebrated instead.

The most widespread state holiday is New Year's Day which is observed in eight states and all three federal territories, followed by Nuzul al-Quran in seven states and all three federal territories, and Thaipusam in five states and two federal territories.

As of 2020, each state and federal territory has designated four to six state public holidays, bringing the total number of (federal and state) public holidays to 20 days in Sabah and Terengganu, 19 days in Labuan, Penang and Sarawak and 18 days in the rest of the country.

Holidays by declaration

Section 8 of the Holidays Act 1951 gives the Prime Minister power to declare any day a public holiday in the whole of Peninsular Malaysia and Labuan, or in one of the federal territories, or in one of the states after consultation with the relevant state government. The declared holiday must be observed by all employers as a paid holiday.

Public holidays had been declared on the polling day for a general election,[3] on the day of the installation of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong,[4] as well as after international sporting events to celebrate the achievements of Malaysian athletes.[5]

At the state level, the state government may declare an occasional holiday (cuti peristiwa) for events such as the installation of the state ruler,[6] after major achievements in sporting events,[7] [8] or even to provide an extra holiday but unable to officially gazette it (such as the annual holiday declaration for Thaipusam in Kedah).[9] [10] Unlike holidays declared under Section 8 of the Holidays Act 1951, observance of occasional state holidays by private businesses and organizations is voluntary, while government offices and schools (except for nationwide exams) are closed.

In Sabah and Sarawak, the power to declare any day as a public holiday rests with the state governor (in practice, exercised on the advice of the state government) in accordance with the states' respective Holidays Ordinances.

List of public holidays by declaration under Section 8 of the Holidays Act 1951

The table below lists additional holidays that were declared under Section 8 of the Holidays Act 1951 for Peninsular Malaysia and Labuan. Unless otherwise noted, the same days were also declared as holidays by Sabah and Sarawak in accordance to their respective Holidays Ordinances.

Year Date Remarks
2017 24 April (Mon) Day of Installation of the 15th Yang di-Pertuan Agong[11] [12]
4 September (Mon) Additional holiday in commemoration of the 2017 SEA Games[13] [14]
2018 9 May (Wed) Polling day for the 14th general election[15] [16]
10 & 11 May (Thu & Fri) Additional holidays for the 14th general election (except Sabah and Sarawak)[17]
10 & 13 May (Thu & Sun)
17 & 18 May (Thu & Fri) Additional holidays for the 14th general election (Sarawak only)[18]
2019 30 July (Tue) Day of Installation of the 16th Yang di-Pertuan Agong[19] [20] [21]
2022 18 & 19 November (Fri & Sat) Eve of polling day and polling day for the 15th general election[22] [23] [24]
28 November (Mon) Additional holiday for the 15th general election[25] [26] [27]
In states and federal territories observing the Saturday - Sunday weekend
In states observing the Friday - Saturday weekend

Entitlement in employment law

In Peninsular Malaysia and Labuan, employees whose employment is covered by the Employment Act 1955 are entitled to 11 paid public holidays a year. Five of the holidays are fixed by law: National Day, Yang di-Pertuan Agong's Birthday, birthday of the ruler or governor of the state (Federal Territory Day in the federal territories) where the employee is contracted to work, Labour Day and Malaysia Day. The remaining six paid holidays are chosen by the employer from the gazetted public holidays, with notice provided to employees before the start of each calendar year. In addition, any public holiday declared under Section 8 of the Holidays Act 1951 is to be observed as a paid holiday.

Should an employee be required to work on a paid holiday, the employee may be given another day off, or compensated at two times their ordinary wages in addition to holiday pay. Overtime work done on a paid holiday is to be compensated at three times the hourly rate of pay (or three times the ordinary rate per piece for piece-rated employees).

Employment in Sabah and Sarawak is regulated by the Labour Ordinance of the respective states. Employees in Sabah are entitled to 14 paid public holidays a year while those in Sarawak are entitled to 16 days, with four fixed holidays on National Day, Yang di-Pertuan Agong's Birthday, the State Governor's Birthday and Labour Day. The provisions on compensation for work done on paid holidays are identical to the Employment Act 1955.

Table of public holidays

All holidays are state/territorial public holidays unless otherwise indicated.

Date[28] English name Malay name Terengganu
1 January Hari Tahun Baru colspan="7" colspan="4"
14 January Yang di-Pertuan Besar of Negeri Sembilan's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Yang di-Pertuan Besar Negeri Sembilan
Full moon in the month of Thai (January–February) Hari Thaipusam colspan="2"
First two days of the first lunar month (January–February) Tahun Baru Cina colspan="16"
1 February Hari Wilayah Persekutuan colspan="2"
4 March Sultan of Terengganu's Coronation Day Hari Ulang Tahun Pertabalan Sultan Terengganu
23 March Sultan of Johor's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Sultan Johor
Friday before Easter (western Christianity) (March–April) Jumaat Agung colspan="2"
15 April Declaration of Malacca City as a Historical City Hari Perisytiharan Bandar Melaka sebagai Bandaraya Bersejarah
26 April Sultan of Terengganu's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Sultan Terengganu
1 May Hari Pekerja colspan="16"
First full moon in May Hari Wesak colspan="16"
17 May Raja of Perlis's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Raja Perlis
22 May Hari Hol of Pahang Hari Hol Pahang
30 and 31 May Pesta Kaamatan (Pesta Menuai)
1 and 2 June Perayaan Hari Gawai Dayak
First Monday of June Yang di-Pertuan Agong's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Yang di-Pertuan Agong colspan="16"
Third Sunday of June Sultan of Kedah's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Sultan Kedah
7 July Hari Ulang Tahun Perisytiharan Tapak Warisan Dunia
Second Saturday of July Governor of Penang's Birthday Hari Jadi Yang di-Pertua Negeri Pulau Pinang
22 July Hari Kemerdekaan Sarawak
30 July Sultan of Pahang's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Sultan Pahang
24 August Governor of Malacca's Birthday Hari Jadi Yang di-Pertua Negeri Melaka
31 August Hari Kebangsaan/Hari Merdeka colspan="16"
16 September Hari Malaysia colspan="16"
29 and 30 September Sultan of Kelantan's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Sultan Kelantan
First Saturday of October Governor of Sabah's Birthday Hari Jadi Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sabah
Second Saturday of October Governor of Sarawak's Birthday Hari Jadi Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak
Naraka Chaturdashi, the day preceding the new moon in the month of Aippasi (October–November) Deepavali colspan="13" colspan="2"
First Friday of November Sultan of Perak's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Sultan Perak
11 December Sultan of Selangor's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Sultan Selangor
24 December Hari Sebelum Krismas
25 December Hari Krismas colspan="16"
Holidays based on the Islamic calendar (does not align with the Earth's year cycle)
Awal Muharram (Maal Hijrah) colspan="16"
Hari Hol Almarhum Sultan Iskandar
Muhammad's Birthday Hari Keputeraan Nabi Muhammad (Maulidur Rasul) colspan="16"
Israk dan Mikraj
Awal Ramadan colspan="2"
17 RamadanHari Nuzul Al-Quran colspan="3" colspan="5" colspan="2"
Hari Raya Puasa/Hari Raya Aidilfitri colspan="16"
Hari Arafah
Hari Raya Qurban/Hari Raya Haji/Hari Raya Aidiladha colspan="16"
Total 18 18 18 18 19 18 18 18 19 18 18 18 20 19 18 20

Types of holidays

Malaysia has one of the highest numbers of public holidays in the world, ranking number seven in the top ten countries after Thailand, Indonesia, India and Hong Kong. Some holidays are federally gazetted public holidays and some are public holidays observed by individual states. Other festivals are observed by particular ethnic or religion groups, but are not public holidays. The main holy days of each major religion are public holidays, taking place on either the western calendar or religious ones.

Secular

The most widespread holiday is the "Hari Kebangsaan" (National Day), otherwise known as "Hari Merdeka" (Independence Day) on 31 August commemorating the independence of the Federation of Malaya. This, as well as Labour Day (1 May), the King's birthday (First Monday of June) and some other festivals are major national public holidays. Federal Territory day is celebrated in the three Federal territories. Malaysia Day, held on 16 September to commemorate the formation of Malaysia, became a nationwide holiday in 2010. Before that it was celebrated only in Sabah, Sarawak and Labuan. New Year's Day is also observed as a public holiday in all Malaysian states, except for Johor, Kedah, Kelantan, Perlis, and Terengganu.

Religious and ethnic

Muslim holidays are highly prominent in Malaysia. The most important of these is Hari Raya Puasa (also called Hari Raya Aidilfitri) which is the Malay translation of Eid al-Fitr. It is generally a festival honoured by the Muslims worldwide marking the end of Ramadan will the fasting month. In addition to Hari Raya Puasa, they also celebrate Hari Raya Aidiladha (also called Hari Raya Haji referring to its occurrence after the culmination of the annual Hajj or Hari Raya Qurban), Awal Muharram (Islamic New Year) and Maulidur Rasul (Birthday of Muhammad).

Malaysian Chinese typically hold the same festivals observed by Chinese around the world. Chinese New Year is the most prominent, lasting for 15-days and ending with Chap Goh Mei (十五暝). Other festivals celebrated by Chinese are the Qingming Festival, the Dragon Boat Festival and the Mid-Autumn Festival.

Malaysian Indians of the Hindu faith celebrate Deepavali, the festival of light,[29] while Thaipusam is a celebration in which Hindu pilgrims from all over the country meet at the Batu Caves.[30] The most important Sikh festival is the Sikh new year or Vaisakhi festival. Other important days are Lodi and Gurpurab. Other Indian and Indochinese communities observe their new year celebrations at around the same time, such as Pohela Boishakh of the Bengalis and Songkran (water festival) of the Thais. People in the northern states do celebrate the Thai festival of Loy Kratong.[31]

Wesak (Malay for Vesak), the Buddhist festival commemorating Buddha's birth, is a public holiday.[29] Malaysia's Christian community observes most of the holidays observed by Christians elsewhere, most notably Christmas[29] and Easter. Good Friday, however, is only a public holiday in the two Bornean states. The harvest festivals of Gawai in Sarawak and Kaamatan in Sabah are also important for East Malaysians.[32]

New Year's Day, Chinese New Year, and the start of the Islamic calendar are all public holidays.[29]

Participation

Despite most of the festivals being identified with a particular ethnic or religious group, festivities are often participated in by all Malaysians. One example of this is the celebration of Kongsi Raya which is used when Hari Raya Puasa and Chinese New Year coincide. The term Kongsi Raya (which means "sharing the celebration" in Malay) was coined because of the similarity between the word kongsi and the Chinese New Year greeting of Gong xi fa cai. Similarly, the portmanteau Deepa Raya was coined when Hari Raya Puasa and Deepavali coincided.[33]

A practice known as "open house" (rumah terbuka) is common during the festivities, especially during Hari Raya Aidilfitri, Deepavali, Chinese New Year and Christmas. Open house means that all well-wishers are received and that everyone regardless of background is invited to attend.[34] Open houses are normally held at the home of the host and food are also prepared by the host, however, there are also open houses held at larger public venues especially when hosted by government agencies or corporations. Also during the festivities, most Malaysians would take the time off work or school to return to their hometowns to celebrate the festivities with their extended relatives. This practice is commonly known as balik kampung and usually causes traffic jams on most highways in the country.[35]

Festivals of Malaysia

Muslim festivals

Festival[36] DateStatusEthnic GroupNote
Islamic New Year / Maal Hijrah / Awal Muharam1 MuharamNationwideMalay
Maulidur Rasul12 Rabiulawal NationwideMalay
Israk dan Mikraj27 Rejab NationwideMalay
Awal Ramadan / Awal Berpuasa1 Ramadan NationwideMalay
Nuzul al-Quran17 RamadanNationwideMalay
Hari Raya Aidilfitri / Hari Raya Puasa1 Syawal NationwideMalay
Awal Zulhijjah1 Zulhijjah NationwideMalay
Hari Arafah9 ZulhijjahNationwideMalay
Hari Raya Aidiladha / Hari Raya Haji / Hari Raya Korban10 ZulhijjahNationwideMalay

Christian festivals

FestivalDateStatusEthnic GroupNote
New Year's Day1 JanuaryNationwide
Intrudu Water Festival Sunday before Ash WednesdayMalaccaKristang
Good FridayThe Friday preceding Easter SundayNationwide
EasterNationwide
29 JuneMalaccaKristang
24 DecemberNationwide
Christmas Day25 DecemberNationwide

Indian festivals

FestivalDateStatusEthnic GroupNote
First day of the month of TaiNationwideIndians
Thaipusammid-January to mid-FebruaryNationwide
Puthandu / Tamil New Year / Ugadi / Telugu New Year / VaisakhiNationwide
Deepavali / Diwali / Festival of LightsNationwide

Chinese festivals

FestivalDateStatusEthnic GroupNote
Beginning of SpringJanuary/FebruaryNationwideChinese
Chinese New Year / Lunar New Year / Spring FestivalJanuary/FebruaryNationwideChinese
Festival of the Heavenly God or Jade Emperor January/FebruaryNationwideChinese
Lantern Festival / Chap Goh MehJanuary/FebruaryNationwideChinese
Qing Ming Festival / Cheng BengAprilNationwideChinese and Chitty
Duanwu Festival / Dragon Boat Festival / Chang FestivalJuneNationwideChinese
Qixi Festival / Chinese Valentine's DayAugustNationwideChinese
Hungry Ghost FestivalAugust/SeptemberNationwideChinese
Nine Emperor Gods FestivalSeptember/OctoberNationwideChinese
Mid-Autumn Festival / Mooncake FestivalSeptember/OctoberNationwideChinese
Double Ninth Festival9th day of the 9th lunar monthNationwideChinese
Dōngzhì Festival / Tang Chek Festival / Winter Solstice Festival DecemberNationwideChinese

Ethnic festivals

FestivalDateStatusEthnic GroupNote
Pesta Kalimaran31 MarchSabahMurut
March or early April Mukah, SarawakMelanau
SongkranAprilWest MalaysiaSiamese
Regatta Lepa20–22 AprilSemporna, SabahEast coast Bajau
30, 31 MaySabah and LabuanKadazan-Dusun
Hari Gawai1, 2 June SarawakDayak
Pesta Rumbia9 and 10 JulyKuala Penyu, SabahBisaya and Kadazan
Pesta Kelapa2 SeptemberKudat, SabahRungus
Tamu Besar29 and 30 OctoberKota Belud, SabahWest coast Bajau
Loi KrathongOctober/NovemberWest MalaysiaSiamese
Pesta Jagung5 and 6 NovemberKota Marudu, SabahKadazan-Dusun

International and National Festivals

FestivalDateStatusEthnic GroupNote
International Women's Day8 MarchWorldwide
International Workers' Day1 MayWorldwide
Mother's DaySecond Sunday of MayWorldwide
Teachers' Days16 MayNationwide
Father's DayThird Sunday in JuneWorldwide
Parents' DayFirst Sunday in JulyNationwide

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Johor banks to skip rest day switch . Malay Mail . 6 December 2013 . 11 October 2019.
  2. News: New weekend but business as usual in JB . The Straits Times . AsiaOne . 6 January 2014 . 11 October 2019.
  3. News: Putrajaya declares May 9 a holiday . Malay Mail . 11 April 2018 . 6 January 2019.
  4. News: 3 April 2017 . April 24 a public holiday . Malay Mail . 6 January 2019.
  5. News: PM Najib declares Sept 4 a public holiday for Malaysia's outstanding success in Sea Games . New Straits Times . 31 August 2017 . 6 January 2019.
  6. News: Kedah declares Oct 22 as occasional public holiday . Malay Mail . 4 October 2018 . 6 January 2019.
  7. News: Selangor govt declares Monday a holiday after Msia Cup win . New Straits Times . 13 December 2015 . 6 January 2019.
  8. News: Win or lose, Sunday declared holiday in Terengganu . New Straits Times . 24 October 2018 . 6 January 2019.
  9. News: Kedah declares Thaipusam 'occasional state holiday' . The Star (Malaysia) . 6 January 2016 . 6 January 2019.
  10. News: Thaipusam to remain annual occasional public holiday in Kedah if BN in power: MB . New Straits Times . 31 January 2018 . 6 January 2019.
  11. News: Sabah also declares April 24 a public holiday . New Straits Times . 4 April 2017 . 25 July 2019.
  12. News: April 24 a public holiday for Sarawak too . Borneo Post . 5 April 2017 . 25 July 2019.
  13. News: Sabah declares Sept 4 a public holiday as well . New Straits Times . 31 August 2017 . 25 July 2019.
  14. News: Sept 4 a public holiday in Sarawak . New Straits Times . 31 August 2017 . 25 July 2019.
  15. News: Sabah government announces May 9 as public holiday . New Straits Times . 12 April 2018 . 25 July 2019.
  16. News: Sarawak government declares May 9 as public holiday . The Star . 12 April 2018 . 25 July 2019.
  17. News: Public holidays on Thursday and Friday: Ali Hamsa . New Straits Times . 10 May 2018 . 25 July 2019.
  18. News: May 17 and 18 declared additional public holidays in Sarawak . The Star . 11 May 2018 . 25 July 2019.
  19. News: July 30 declared public holiday over coronation of King . The Star . 28 June 2019 . 30 June 2019.
  20. News: Sabah declares July 30 public holiday for King's coronation . Malay Mail . 28 June 2019 . 25 July 2019.
  21. News: Sarawak to observe July 30 as public holiday for King's coronation . The Star . 5 July 2019 . 25 July 2019.
  22. News: GE15: PM declares Nov 18 and 19 public holidays . New Straits Times . 14 November 2022. 15 November 2022.
  23. News: Special public holidays on Nov 18-19 in Sabah: CM . New Straits Times . 14 November 2022. 15 November 2022.
  24. News: Public holiday on polling eve in Sarawak, declares Abang Jo . The Star . 14 November 2022. 15 November 2022.
  25. News: Nov 28 is a public holiday, says Anwar . The Star . 24 November 2022. 26 November 2022.
  26. News: Sabah CM announces statewide holiday on Monday in line with Putrajaya . The Malay Mail . 25 November 2022. 26 November 2022.
  27. News: Sarawak Premier's Office declares Nov 28 a public holiday . The Borneo Post . 24 November 2022. 26 November 2022.
  28. https://www.kabinet.gov.my/bkpp/pdf/hari_kelepasan_am/hka_2022.pdf Table of Public Holidays 2022
  29. Book: Marshall Cavendish Corporation . Marshall Cavendish Corporation . World and Its Peoples: Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, and Brunei . Marshall Cavendish Corporation . 2008 . New York . 1221 . 9780761476429.
  30. Web site: Festivals of Malaysia ~ Thaipusam Festival . Go2travelmalaysia.com . 15 September 2010.
  31. Web site: Ben van Wijnen . Loi Krathong . Malaysiasite.nl . 15 September 2010.
  32. Web site: Malaysia – Holidays . Go2travelmalaysia.com . 15 September 2010.
  33. Web site: The English Teacher. Malaysian English Language Teaching Association. 2 May 2008. 15 September 2010. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110516014935/http://www.melta.org.my/ET/2007/2007.pdf#page=9. 16 May 2011. dmy-all.
  34. Web site: Religion . Matic.gov.my . 8 November 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110410214421/http://matic.gov.my/en/tourism/about-malaysia/religion.html . 10 April 2011 . dmy-all .
  35. News: New Straits Times. 7 September 2010. 18 November 2010. Ripple effect of the festive rush. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100914123615/http://www.nst.com.my/nst/articles/17billion/Article. 14 September 2010. dmy-all.
  36. Web site: TARIKH-TARIKH PENTING DALAM ISLAM : TAHUN 2020 / 1441 – 1442 H BAGI MALAYSIA. Islam.gov.my. 15 January 2022.
  37. Web site: Parading for Buddha. Mypenang.gov.my. 15 January 2022.