Jewish Holiday downloads for desktop, mobile and web calendars

Free Jewish holidays for Microsoft Outlook, iPhone, iPad, macOS Desktop Calendar, Android (via Google Calendar), or to any desktop program that supports iCalendar (.ics) files.

Expand the sections below to download/subscribe in your device or web/desktop application. Subscribers to these feeds receive perpetual updates.

We provide step-by-step instructions for importing into Apple, Google, Outlook and other calendar apps.

Major holidays such as Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur, Passover, Hanukkah.
Does NOT include minor & modern holidays, fast days or Rosh Chodesh.

Diaspora schedule (for Jews living anywhere outside of modern Israel)

~40 events per year · 10-year perpetual feed

Without emoji:

Major, minor, modern Israeli holidays, fast days and more.
Diaspora schedule (for Jews living anywhere outside of modern Israel)

  • Major holidays such as Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur, Passover, Hanukkah
  • Rosh Chodesh
  • Minor holidays
  • Fast days
  • Modern Israeli holidays
  • Special Shabbatot

~95 events per year · 8-year perpetual feed

Without emoji:

Create a custom calendar with event titles in different languages, candle-lighting times for Shabbat and holidays, Israeli holiday schedule, etc

Parashat ha-Shavua - Weekly Torah Portion such as Bereshit, Noach, Lech-Lecha.

Diaspora schedule

~50 events per year · 5-year perpetual feed

Parashat ha-Shavua - Weekly Torah Portion such as בראשית, נח, לך־לך.

Israel schedule 🇮🇱

~50 events per year · 5-year perpetual feed

Displays the Hebrew date (such as 18th of Tevet) every day of the week. Sephardic transliteration.

Hebrew year is included in event title on the 1st of each month (e.g. 1st of Kislev, 5782)

365 events per year · 3-year perpetual feed

Displays the Hebrew date without nikud (e.g. י״ח טבת) every day of the week.

Hebrew year is included in event title on the 1st of each month (e.g. א׳ כסלו תשפ״ב)

365 events per year · 3-year perpetual feed

Displays the Hebrew date with nikud (e.g. י״ח טֵבֵת) every day of the week

365 events per year · 3-year perpetual feed

7 weeks from the second night of Pesach to the day before Shavuot

49 events per year · 3-year perpetual feed

Rosh Chodesh is a minor holiday observed at the beginning of every month in the Hebrew calendar, marked by the birth of a new moon.

18 events per year · 10-year perpetual feed

יוֹם כִּפּוּר קָטָן is a minor day of atonement occurring monthly on the day preceding each Rosh Chodesh.

Yom Kippur Katan is omitted in Elul (on the day before Rosh Hashanah), Tishrei (Yom Kippur has just passed), Kislev (due to Chanukah) or Nisan (fasting not permitted during Nisan). When Rosh Chodesh occurs on Shabbat or Sunday, Yom Kippur Katan is observed on the preceding Thursday. [1]

9 events per year · 10-year perpetual feed

Daily Learning

From ancient biblical times, the Torah has been divided into portions which are read each week on a yearly calendar. In line with this tradition, various calendars have emerged to facilitate groups of learners in collectively studying designated texts.

Daily regimen of learning the Babylonian Talmud. This cycle takes approximately 7½ years to complete.

365 events per year · 5-year perpetual feed

A program of daily learning in which participants study two Mishnayot each day in order to finish the entire Mishnah in ~6 years.

365 events per year · 5-year perpetual feed

A daily regimen of learning the books of Nevi'im (Prophets) and Ketuvim (Writings). This cycle takes ~2 years to complete.

365 events per year · 5-year perpetual feed

A daily learning cycle for completing Tanakh annually. On Shabbat, each Torah portion is recited. On weekdays, Prophets and Writings are recited according to the ancient Masoretic division of sedarim. This cycle is completed each year.

~293 events per year · 5-year perpetual feed

Daily study of a few chapters from the 150-chapter book of Psalms (Tehillim). The entire book is completed on the final day of each Hebrew month. On months with 29 days, the 30th portion is combined with the 29th portion.

365 events per year · 2-year perpetual feed

Daily regimen of learning the Jerusalem Talmud (Vilna Edition). Using the Vilna edition, the Yerushalmi Daf Yomi program takes 4¼ years to complete. Unlike the Daf Yomi Bavli cycle, this Yerushalmi cycle skips both Yom Kippur and Tisha B'Av.

363 events per year · 5-year perpetual feed

Daily regimen of learning the Jerusalem Talmud (Schottenstein Edition). The Schottenstein edition of Yerushalmi Daf Yomi uses different page numbers than the Vilna and takes 5¾ years to complete.

365 events per year · 5-year perpetual feed

A learning program that divides Maimonides’ Mishneh Torah legal code into daily units, to complete the whole work in three years.

365 events per year · 5-year perpetual feed

Daily study of the Sefer Chofetz Chaim, which deals with the Jewish ethics and laws of speech. The book is divided into 119 parts in a regular year and 129 parts in a leap year.

365 events per year · 3-year perpetual feed

A learning program that covers a page of Talmud a week. By going at a slower pace, it facilitates greater mastery and retention.

52 events per year · 10-year perpetual feed

Areyvut’s daily act of kindness and related quotation from Tanach or Rabbinic text.

Example (February 11): Visit residents of nursing homes who have no family to visit them. "The path of the righteous is like a ray of light" (Proverbs 4:18).

365 events per year · 10-year perpetual feed