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Bahai Calendar Converter — Gregorian to Badí' Era (BE) | LazyTools
Calendar Tool

Bahai Calendar Converter — Gregorian & Badí' Era

Convert any Gregorian date to the Bahai calendar — the calendar of the Bahai Faith, used by Bahai communities worldwide. The result shows the day, month name with its spiritual meaning (such as Bahá = Splendour, Núr = Light), the year in the Badí' Era (BE) and whether the date is Naw-Rúz (Bahai New Year). Furthermore, a reference grid shows all 19 months with their meanings and the Ayyam-i-Ha intercalary days.

19 months + Ayyam-i-HaMonth spiritual meaningsNaw-Rúz flagBadí' Era (BE) yearBahai day of week
The 19 Bahai months and their meanings

How to use the Bahai Calendar Converter

1
Enter any Gregorian date
Click the date field and select any date. Furthermore, the tool defaults to today — showing the current Bahai date immediately. Naw-Rúz (Bahai New Year) falls on approximately 21 March each year.
2
Read the Bahai month and its meaning
Each Bahai month has a name with a spiritual meaning from Arabic. Furthermore, the month meaning appears in the table — for example, Bahá (Splendour) is the first month and 'Alá' (Loftiness) is the 19th. The Bahai day of the week also appears with its Bahai name.
3
Check for Ayyam-i-Ha
Between the 18th and 19th months, the calendar has 4 or 5 intercalary days called Ayyam-i-Ha (Days of Há). Furthermore, these days are used for gift-giving, charity and hospitality in the Bahai Faith. In Bahai leap years, Ayyam-i-Ha has 5 days rather than 4.
4
Note the Naw-Rúz indicator
The tool flags 1 Bahá (approximately 21 March) as Naw-Rúz — the Bahai New Year. Furthermore, Naw-Rúz has deep roots in Persian culture and marks the spring equinox. It predates the Bahai Faith and is also celebrated as the Persian New Year.
5
Explore the month meanings grid
The grid below the widget shows all 19 Bahai months and Ayyam-i-Ha with their spiritual meanings. Furthermore, the 19 months × 19 days structure reflects the Bahai significance of the number 19 — a number with theological meaning in the Bahai Faith.

The Bahai calendar structure

The Bahai calendar (Badí' calendar) has 19 months of 19 days each — 361 days total. Furthermore, Ayyam-i-Ha (4 or 5 intercalary days) plus the 19th month 'Alá' bring the year to 365 or 366 days. The total 19 × 19 + 4/5 structure reflects the special significance of the number 19 in the Bahai Faith.

PeriodDaysNotes
Months 1–1818 × 19 = 342 daysEach month named for a divine attribute
Ayyam-i-Ha4 days (5 in leap year)Gift-giving and hospitality period
Month 19 ('Alá')19 daysMonth of fasting — the Bahai 19-day fast
Total365 or 366 daysAligns with solar year

The Bahai week — 7 days with unique names

The Bahai calendar retains the 7-day week but with Bahai names. Furthermore, each day is named for a divine attribute: Jalál (Glory — Saturday), Jamál (Beauty — Sunday), Fidál (Grace — Monday), 'Idál (Justice — Tuesday), Istijlál (Majesty — Wednesday), Istiqlál (Independence — Thursday) and Jamál (Friday, the day of rest).

How the Bahai calendar is calculated

The Bahai year begins on Naw-Rúz — the vernal equinox, approximately 21 March. Furthermore, the Bahai Era (Badí' Era) began in 1844 CE — the year of the Declaration of the Báb, which marks Year 1 of the Bahai calendar.

Bahai year = Gregorian year − 1843 (on or after Naw-Rúz ~ 21 March)
Naw-Rúz = vernal equinox, approximately 20–21 March
Year 1 BE = 1844 CE (Declaration of the Báb, 23 May 1844)
Bahai month = floor(day-of-year / 19) + 1 (months 1–18)
Ayyam-i-Ha = days 343–346 (or 347 in Bahai leap years)

The new Bahai calendar (2015 update)

In 2015, the Universal House of Justice updated Naw-Rúz to use the astronomical equinox in Tehran. Furthermore, Naw-Rúz can now fall on 20 or 21 March depending on the year. This tool uses 21 March as a simplified fixed date — accurate for most years. Moreover, Bahai communities observe the astronomically correct date announced annually by the Universal House of Justice.

Worked example: current Bahai year

On Naw-Rúz 2025 (21 March 2025), the Bahai world celebrated the beginning of Year 182 BE — the 182nd year of the Bahai Era.

Gregorian dateBahai dateMonth meaning
21 March 20251 Bahá 182 BE — Naw-RúzBahá = Splendour
1 May 202512 Jamál 182 BEJamál = Beauty
4 March 20261 Ayyam-i-Ha 182 BEDays of gift-giving
20 March 202619 'Alá' 182 BELoftiness — last day of fast
Year 182 BE began on 21 March 2025. Furthermore, the number 182 is significant in Bahai numerology — 19 × 9 + 11 — but the Bahai calendar year also marks 181 years since the Declaration of the Báb in 1844. The 19th month 'Alá' is the month of the Bahai fast — 19 days of sunrise-to-sunset fasting observed by Bahai adults.

What is the Bahai calendar?

The Bahai calendar — officially called the Badí' calendar — is the religious calendar of the Bahai Faith. Furthermore, it was created by the Báb (the prophet-herald of the Bahai Faith) and adopted by the Bahai community worldwide. The word Badí' means "wonderful" or "unique" in Arabic — reflecting the calendar's fresh approach to timekeeping.

The calendar year has 19 months of 19 days each — reflecting the Bahai significance of 19 and "Wáhid" (unity). Furthermore, each month carries a name derived from a divine attribute. Moreover, these month names serve as personal names and Bahai day-of-week names.

Naw-Rúz — the Bahai New Year

Naw-Rúz (meaning "New Day" in Persian) falls on the vernal equinox — approximately 21 March. Furthermore, Naw-Rúz predates the Bahai Faith by millennia — it is also the Persian New Year (Nowruz), celebrated across Iran, Afghanistan and Central Asia. The Bahai Faith adopted this ancient spring celebration as its New Year, connecting the faith's Persian origins with its universal spiritual message.

The Bahai Faith and its global community

The Bahai Faith has approximately 5 to 8 million adherents in virtually every country. Furthermore, the faith teaches the unity of all religions and the equality of humanity. Moreover, observant Bahais abstain from work on Bahai Holy Days.

Why the Bahai calendar matters

Employers and institutions with Bahai employees or students benefit from understanding Bahai Holy Days. Furthermore, major Bahai observances — including Naw-Rúz, Ridván (the 12-day celebration of Bahá'u'lláh's declaration), the Birth of the Báb and the Birth of Bahá'u'lláh — are days when observant Bahais may request leave from work or school. Moreover, these dates shift each year as the Bahai calendar aligns with the solar year.

The Bahai faith has significant presence in Iran, India, North America and Europe. Furthermore, Bahai organisations — including the Bahai International Community at the United Nations — are active in international affairs. Moreover, understanding the Bahai calendar is relevant for anyone working with Bahai communities, NGOs or international organisations where Bahai members are active participants.

Ayyam-i-Ha and the 19-day feast

Ayyam-i-Ha — before the 19th month — is a period of hospitality, charitable giving and gift exchange. Furthermore, the 19-Day Feast on the first of each month is the core Bahai community gathering. Moreover, the 19th month 'Alá' is the month of fasting — 19 days of sunrise-to-sunset abstinence for healthy adults over 15.

Frequently asked questions

The current Bahai year is calculated by subtracting 1843 from the Gregorian year for dates on or after Naw-Rúz (~21 March), or 1844 for dates before Naw-Rúz. Furthermore, for 2025 CE, the Bahai year is 182 BE (after 21 March 2025) or 181 BE (before 21 March). The Bahai year 1 BE corresponds to 1844 CE — the year of the Declaration of the Báb on 23 May 1844.
The number 19 holds deep theological significance in the Bahai Faith. Furthermore, the Arabic word "Wáhid" (unity or one) has a numerical value of 19 in Arabic abjad notation. The Báb organised the first 18 disciples (the "Letters of the Living") plus himself as a unit of 19. Moreover, the 19 × 19 structure of the calendar — 361 named days — reflects this numerological framework throughout the calendar.
Ayyam-i-Ha (Days of Há) are the 4 or 5 intercalary days inserted before the 19th month to bring the calendar year to 365 or 366 days. Furthermore, in the Bahai Faith, these days are dedicated to hospitality, charitable giving, gift exchange and acts of service. The letter Há in the Bahai sacred writings represents the number 5 (its abjad value), linking this period to the name of Bahá (B-H-A = 9 in abjad).
Naw-Rúz — the Bahai New Year — falls on the vernal equinox, which is approximately 20 or 21 March in the Gregorian calendar. Furthermore, since 2015, the Universal House of Justice has determined Naw-Rúz by the astronomical equinox in Tehran. This means Naw-Rúz can fall on 20 March in some years. Moreover, the official date is announced annually — this tool uses 21 March as the simplified calculation, which is correct for most years.
The nine principal Bahai Holy Days include Naw-Rúz (21 March), the first day of Ridván (late April), the ninth and twelfth days of Ridván, the Declaration of the Báb (23 May), the Ascension of Bahá'u'lláh (29 May), the Martyrdom of the Báb (9 July), the Birth of the Báb and Birth of Bahá'u'lláh (two consecutive days in late October or November following lunar reckoning), and the Day of the Covenant (26 November). Furthermore, work is suspended on the first five and the Birth of the Báb and Bahá'u'lláh.

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