LazyTools Header
Solar Hijri Shamsi to Gregorian Converter — Iranian Calendar | LazyTools
Iranian Calendar Tool

Solar Hijri Shamsi to Gregorian Converter — Iranian Calendar

Convert any date between the Iranian Solar Hijri (Shamsi) calendar and the Gregorian calendar. The tool shows today's Shamsi date live in Persian (Farsi) script at the top. Furthermore, each result shows the month name in both English and Persian, the Iranian season and the full Shamsi date notation used on Iranian official documents, contracts and government communications.

Live Shamsi date in FarsiPersian month namesBoth directionsIranian seasonOfficial Iranian format
🇮🇷 Current Iranian (Shamsi) Date

How to use the Solar Hijri Shamsi Converter

1
Read today's Shamsi date at the top
The dark panel at the top shows today's Solar Hijri date in Persian script — updating from your device's current date. Furthermore, this gives an immediate reference for the current Iranian date without any input required.
2
Convert any Gregorian date to Shamsi
Click the date field and select any Gregorian date. Furthermore, clicking Convert to Shamsi shows the Shamsi date in English and Persian (Farsi) script, the Iranian season and the month structure (months 1–6 have 31 days; months 7–12 have 30 or 29).
3
Convert Shamsi to Gregorian
Click the Shamsi → Gregorian tab. Enter the day, select the month (with Farsi name shown) and enter the AP year. Furthermore, the Gregorian equivalent appears in long form, ISO and day of week.
4
Note the month structure
The Solar Hijri calendar has a distinctive month structure. Furthermore, the first six months (Farvardin through Shahrivar — spring and summer) have 31 days each. The next five have 30 days. The last month, Esfand, has 29 days in normal years and 30 in Solar Hijri leap years.
5
Use for Iranian business document dates
Iranian contracts, invoices, official letters and government documents use Shamsi dates. Furthermore, converting these for international use — or converting Gregorian dates to include in correspondence with Iranian partners — is a common business requirement. The ISO format output copies directly into international documents.

Solar Hijri versus Islamic Hijri calendar

Iran uses two different Hijri calendars for different purposes. Furthermore, the Solar Hijri (Shamsi) calendar is the official civil calendar — aligning with the solar year. The Islamic Hijri (Qamari) calendar is the religious lunar calendar — used for Islamic observances.

CalendarTypeNew yearYear in 2025Used for
Solar Hijri (Shamsi)Solar~21 March (Nowruz)1404 APCivil and official dates in Iran
Islamic Hijri (Qamari)Lunar1 Muharram (shifts ~11 days/year)1446–1447 AHReligious observances in Iran and globally

How the Solar Hijri calendar works

The Solar Hijri calendar uses the same algorithm as the Jalali calendar. Furthermore, the year starts at Nowruz — the vernal equinox — approximately 21 March in the Gregorian calendar. The Shamsi year is approximately 621 to 622 years behind the Gregorian year.

Shamsi Year ≈ Gregorian Year − 621 (after Nowruz ~21 March)
Nowruz 2025 = 21 March 2025 = 1 Farvardin 1404 AP
Months 1–6 = 31 days (Farvardin–Shahrivar: spring and summer)
Months 7–11 = 30 days (Mehr–Bahman: autumn and winter)
Month 12 (Esfand) = 29 days normal, 30 days in Solar Hijri leap year

Worked example: converting an Iranian contract date

An Iranian business contract shows the signing date as "15 Shahrivar 1404". Converting this for an international legal document:

Iranian (Shamsi)Gregorian equivalent
15 Shahrivar 1404 AP6 September 2025
1 Farvardin 1404 AP (Nowruz)21 March 2025
30 Esfand 1404 AP (year-end)21 March 2026
15 Shahrivar 1404 corresponds to 6 September 2025. Furthermore, Shahrivar is month 6 — the last 31-day month of the year. Month 6 starts around 23 August each year. The ISO output (2025-09-06) can be used directly in international contract addenda.

What is the Solar Hijri (Shamsi) calendar?

The Solar Hijri calendar — called Taqvim-e Shamsi in Persian (تقویم شمسی) — is the official civil calendar of Iran and Afghanistan. Furthermore, it is a solar calendar counting years from the Hijra of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) in 622 CE, but aligned with the solar year rather than the lunar year. The word "Shamsi" means "solar" in Persian.

The calendar begins each year at Nowruz — the Persian New Year — which falls on the vernal equinox. Furthermore, all official Iranian documents, legal records, government publications, bank statements and contracts use the Shamsi date. Moreover, news broadcasts in Iran announce the Shamsi date daily alongside the Islamic Hijri date for religious reference.

Nowruz — the Iranian New Year

Nowruz (meaning "New Day") is the Persian New Year — celebrated on the first day of Farvardin (approximately 21 March) at the exact moment of the vernal equinox. Furthermore, Nowruz is one of the world's oldest celebrations — pre-dating Islam by over two thousand years. Moreover, it is observed not just in Iran but also in Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Kurdish communities worldwide — all of whom share the ancient Persian cultural heritage.

Why Shamsi calendar conversion matters

Iran is a major economy with significant international trade — particularly in oil, gas, petrochemicals and agricultural products. Furthermore, every Iranian legal document, contract, invoice and regulatory filing carries a Shamsi date. International companies dealing with Iranian entities must convert these dates for their own Gregorian-calendar accounting, legal and compliance systems. Moreover, the Shamsi year is 621 to 622 years behind the Gregorian year — a substantial offset that creates real confusion without a converter.

Nowruz — the Iranian New Year around 21 March — is a major disruption period for Iranian business. Furthermore, the Nowruz holiday typically runs for at least 13 days (1 to 13 Farvardin). Teams coordinating with Iranian partners must plan around this closure. Moreover, the pre-Nowruz period in the final week of Esfand (late February/early March) also sees reduced business activity as Iranians prepare for the new year.

Nowruz in international business context

Iran is not the only country affected by Nowruz. Furthermore, Afghanistan, Central Asian countries and Kurdish regions also observe Nowruz as a national holiday. Moreover, Kurdish communities in Turkey, Iraq and Syria celebrate Nowruz on 21 March. Any business with supply chains or partnerships across this broad region must account for the Nowruz holiday period each year.

Frequently asked questions

The live display at the top of the tool always shows today's Shamsi date in Persian script. Furthermore, for 2025 CE, the Solar Hijri year is 1404 AP for dates from Nowruz (21 March 2025) onwards, and 1403 AP for dates before Nowruz. The formula is: Shamsi year = Gregorian year − 621 (after ~21 March) or − 622 (before ~21 March).
Both calendars count years from the Hijra of 622 CE but use completely different year lengths. Furthermore, the Solar Hijri follows the solar year (365.25 days) — starting at Nowruz each spring. The Islamic Hijri follows the lunar year (354 days) — starting on 1 Muharram, which shifts approximately 11 days earlier each Gregorian year. In 2025, the Solar Hijri year is 1404 while the Islamic Hijri year is 1446–1447.
Nowruz falls on approximately 21 March each year — the vernal equinox. Furthermore, the official Iranian public holiday runs from 1 to 4 Farvardin (approximately 21–24 March), but in practice businesses close for the full 13-day Nowruz period through Sizdah Bedar (13 Farvardin, approximately 2 April). Moreover, the actual first day of Nowruz is announced based on the precise astronomical equinox time — it can fall on 20 or 21 March.
All official Iranian documents — bank statements, invoices, contracts, legal filings and government forms — use the Shamsi calendar date as the primary date. Furthermore, the Gregorian date is sometimes shown secondarily in international contexts. Converting Shamsi dates from Iranian bank statements, visa documents or business invoices to Gregorian is essential for entering them into international accounting or legal systems that require Gregorian dates.
Yes. Solar Hijri, Shamsi, Jalali and Persian calendar all refer to the same calendar system used in Iran and Afghanistan. Furthermore, these terms are used interchangeably. "Solar Hijri" emphasises its solar (as opposed to lunar) nature and Hijri epoch. "Shamsi" is the Persian word for solar. "Jalali" refers to the 11th-century reform by Sultan Jalal ad-Din Malik-Shah. Moreover, this tool uses the standard Jalali algorithm — the same algorithm used across all Iran-focused calendar applications.

Related Date & Time tools

Every tool on LazyTools runs in your browser. Nothing is uploaded or stored.

Persian Jalali Date Converter

Full Jalali calendar converter with Farsi month names. Furthermore, Nowruz and Persian festival information are included.

Gregorian to Hijri Converter

Convert to the Islamic lunar Hijri calendar. Furthermore, Arabic month names and Islamic significance are shown.

UTC Offset Converter

Find Iran's UTC offset (UTC+3:30 or UTC+4:30 during DST). Furthermore, all Gulf and Middle East timezone offsets are shown.

Days Until Calculator

Count days until Nowruz or any other event. Furthermore, a multi-event dashboard tracks ten countdowns simultaneously.

Online Date Format Converter

Convert dates to ISO and other formats. Furthermore, batch mode converts 100 dates at once from spreadsheets.

Date Difference Calculator

Exact gap between two dates in every unit. Additionally, milestone markers show every 100th and 1000th day.

Rate this tool

4.4
out of 5
148 ratings
5 ★
68%
4 ★
17%
3 ★
7%
2 ★
1%
1 ★
8%
How useful was this tool?