No official public holidays are listed for Spain in 1936.
We could not find published public holiday data for Spain in 1936. The source is Nager.Date, which covers most countries but not all. Try a neighbouring year or contact us if you know of a public source we should add.
Total holidays
0
in 1936
Working days remaining
262
across all of 1936
Upcoming holidays
0
during 1936
See Spain's holidays side by side with another country to plan cross-border work.
Suggested pairs: Iberian neighbours and Latin Europe.
Spain operates a three-tier holiday calendar set by article 37.2 of the Estatuto de los Trabajadores. Of the maximum fourteen paid public holidays per year, the national government fixes eight or nine, the autonomous communities choose two or three, and each municipality designates two local fiestas, typically the patron saint's day. The Ministerio de Trabajo publishes a consolidated annual table in the Boletín Oficial del Estado. Madrid's local holidays for example include San Isidro on 15 May and Almudena on 9 November. Catalonia substitutes La Diada de Sant Jordi observances and adds Sant Esteve on 26 December, the only Spanish region to do so.
Spanish labour and procedural law distinguishes día hábil, any day not a Sunday or public holiday, from día laborable, the actual scheduled working day. Saturdays are días hábiles for most purposes including civil deadlines under article 130 of the Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil, although administrative deadlines under article 30 of Ley 39/2015 treat Saturdays as non-hábiles. The standard private-sector working week is Monday to Friday with banks operating Monday to Friday morning. Settlement of euro transactions follows the TARGET2 calendar; domestic banking follows the Banco de España calendar which mirrors the national list.