Leap year check
No, 1753 is not a leap year.
1753 is not divisible by 4, so it is NOT a leap year, February has the usual 28 days.
A year is a leap year in the Gregorian calendar when it is divisible by 4, with one exception and one exception to that exception: a year divisible by 100 is not a leap year unless it is also divisible by 400. 1753 is not divisible by 4 (1753 ÷ 4 = 438.25), so it cannot be a leap year. The nearest leap years are 1752 before it and 1756 after.
1753 has no February 29, February ends on the 28th. The closest leap day is in 1756, when February 29 falls on a Sunday. If you are counting toward a leapling birthday or a date-sensitive deadline, that 1756 leap day is the one to watch.
1753 runs 365 days, or 52 full weeks plus 1 day. The leap year before 1753 was 1752 and the next one is 1756, keeping the familiar four-year rhythm. To do date math across 1753, counting days to a deadline, an age, or an anniversary that crosses a leap day, use the days-between calculator, which handles leap days automatically.
Check another year
Type a different year, or count the leap years across a range.
Enter any year from 1582 to 4000.
No, 1753 is not a leap year
1753 is not divisible by 4, so it is NOT a leap year, February has the usual 28 days.
Count leap years in a range
How many leap years fall between two years (inclusive).
5 leap years between 1753 and 1773 (21 years, about one every 4.20 years).