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Public Holidays and
Bank Holidays for
Ecuador
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Related and neighboring countries: North and South America Argentina Bolivia Brazil Chile Colombia Paraguay Peru Uruguay Venezuela
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The list of Ecuador bank
holidays, national holidays and public holidays for 2008, comes from
the Q++ Worldwide Public Holidays Database,
the professional source of international public holidays long trusted by the world's
foremost diary publishers. The information on this page is provided for private, non-professional, use.
Qualified professionals can license data for 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011,
2012, and beyond. For details, please visit our licensing information
page or |
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At the bottom of this page:
Recent News and Updates
Background Information
Footnotes
Disclaimer
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Date in 2008 |
Holiday Name |
Observance* |
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Tue |
New Year's Day
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Mon |
Carnaval (compensated Feb.9)
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Tue |
Carnaval (compensated Feb.16)
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Fri |
Good Friday
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Sun |
Easter
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Christian |
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Thu |
Labor Day
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Fri |
Bridge Public Holiday (compensated May 17)
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Sat |
Battle of Pichincha Day
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Fri |
Constitutional National Public Holiday (starts at 11am)
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Afternoon |
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Fri |
Guayaquil Day (the entire day)
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Regional |
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Sun |
National Day
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Fri |
Guayaquil Independence Day Holiday
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Sun |
All Souls' Day
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Mon |
Cuenca Independence Day
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Sat |
Quito Day
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Regional |
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Thu |
Christmas
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Fri |
Bridge Public Holiday (compensated Jan.10, 2009)
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* |
Wed |
New Year's Eve Bank Holiday
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Banks |
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© 1989-2008 Alter Ego
Services |
Recent News and Updates |
20 Dec 2008 (Confirmado.net-Quito) Ecuador's President, Rafael Correa, called a press conference last night to deny the recent rumours of upcoming extended bank holidays (feriado bancario) and de-pegging of the local currency from the US dollar.
29 Nov 2008 (El Universo-Guayaquil) Late this week, Ecuador's President, Rafael Correa Delgado, issued Executive Decree 1452, declaring Friday, December 26, 2008, and Friday, January 2, 2009, as one-off bridge public holidays (días de descanso obligatorio), for both the public and private sectors.
24 Jul 2008 (Radio Sucre-Quito) By a vote of 78 for, 4 against, 3 blanks and 22 abstentions, the Ecuador National Assembly voted to make tomorrow, Friday, July 25, 2008, a one-off national public holiday to celebrate the introduction of a new constitutional framework (normally, July 25 is a regional public holiday, not a national public holiday).
01 May 2008 (Diario La Opinión) The signed decree (Decreto Ejecutivo 1046), declaring Friday, May 2nd, 2008, as a full national public holiday, was finally released and it stipulates that Saturday May 17, 2008, will be a regular working day in compensation for the bridge public holiday.
26 Apr 2008 (CRE Satelital) Ecuador's Tourism Minister, Verónica Sión, announced that the 2008 Labour Day public holiday (Día del Trabajo) would remain on Thursday, May 1st, but that, in addition, Friday, May 2nd, 2008, would be a bridge public holiday, to be compensated by Saturday, May 10, 2008, being a regular working day.
19 Apr 2008 (El Universo-Guayaquil) Ecuador's Tourism Minister, Verónica Sión, announced yesterday that her ministry was working on a decree that would move the 2008 observance of the Labour Day public holiday (Día del Trabajo) from Thursday, May 1st, to Friday, May 2nd, 2008.
20 Mar 2008 (Presidencia del Ecuador) The government human resources department has confirmed that Friday, March 21, 2008 (Good Friday) was a paid public holiday for all civil servants, but that the day before, Thursday, March 20, would be a regular working day.
27 Jan 2008 (El Mercurio) Saturday February 9 and Saturday February 16 will be normal working days for all sectors of the economy, both private and public, in compensation for the February 4 and February 5 Carnival public holidays.
09 Dec 2007 (Ecuador InMediato) A presidential decree has made Monday, December 24 and Monday, December 31, 2007, one-off bridge public holidays. In compensation, Saturday December 22, and Saturday December 29, 2007, will be regular working days.
15 Oct 2007 (El Diario) Early reports of tourism-related activity during the recent 3-day weekend are disappointing by all accounts. This may revive the debate as large parts of Ecuador's population are opposed to the moving of religious or patriotic holidays from their appointed date.
More News Updates For the full version of the summarized news items above, and older news items not displayed above, go to the Ecuador public holidays news and updates page, or worldwide public holidays news and updates page, or subscribe to one of our free email newsletters. |
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Background Information |
Governing Law: Official public holidays in Ecuador are regulated by the Código del Trabajo, de 30 de junio de 1978, and the 1994 Ley núm. 55, reformatoria del Código del Trabajo y de la ley del Servicio Civil y Carrera Administrativa which added some national public holidays, as well as punctually issued decrees, the most recent of which was the Decreto Ejecutivo N. 418 de 19 de junio de 2007. The moving of public holidays that fall on certain weekdays is also regulated by the Ley Orgánica de Servicio Civil y Carrera Administrativa y de Unificación y Homologación de las Remuneraciones del Sector Público which, in therory applies only to civil servants, but is generally also followed by the private sector.
Mid-Week Public Holidays: Public holidays that fall in the middle of the week are often moved to a Friday or a Monday to make a long weekend. For 2007 public holidays, this was specified in the executive decree 2369 of January 12, 2007, later amended concerning the recuperation days for Carnaval (many web sites, still show the wrong recuperation dates). In any case, the official celebrations of what that day represents are observed on the actual anniversary of that commemoration day.
Battle of Pichincha Day celebrations occur on May 24th.
National Day celebrations occur on August 10th, and Guayaquil Independence Day celebrations occur on October 9th, even if the public holiday (day off) has been moved to another date.
Carnaval: The Monday and Tuesday of Carnaval were only for banks and civil servants until 2006. Then, in 2007, for one year they were extended to all private sector workers, provided they compensated by working on 2 Saturdays (March 10 and 17). This system was subsequently extended to the years 2008-2009-2010-2011.
Guayaquil Day and Quito Day are observed respectively in those cities only.
The Presidential Investiture Day is only a public holiday in Quito and is not an annual holiday.
Other Sources of Information For information not covered here, see the following specialized websites: Central Bank of Ecuador (Ecuador central bank), ASI Hot Spots (security-related world events: terrorist threats, political strife, strikes, criminal activity, aviation incidents and health outbreaks), CIA World Factbook (maps, demographic and economic statistics), Copp Clark (financial markets' trading hours, settlement holidays and currency non-clearing days), and the IFES Election Guide (information covering upcoming elections, referenda, electoral structures and past voter participation). |
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Footnotes |
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Observance : Any entry in the Observance column indicates that, in Ecuador, the holiday may be regional or non-official or limited to certain religious and/or linguistic groups, or begin at a time other than midnight. Note that religious holidays are included only if they are national public holidays, or if the national labour code has specific holiday allowances for employees of specific religions. For more information, see our pages on the religious calendars of the world. |
Disclaimer
In many parts of
the world, holidays are subject to arbitrary, last minute, changes by local
authorities. While every effort has been made to present an accurate list of
2008 bank holidays, legal holidays and public holidays for Ecuador, we
cannot accept any responsibility for any error or omission in the data presented
above. You are therefore advised to verify
the above dates with the embassy or consulate of Ecuador, before planning any
trip to Ecuador. For last-minute updates to worldwide public holidays,
visit our blog or subscribe to our free
email newsletters. |
Animated flag graphics courtesy of
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