LazyTools Header
Ethiopian Date Converter — Ge'ez Calendar to Gregorian | LazyTools
Calendar Tool

Ethiopian Date Converter — Ethiopian Calendar & Gregorian

Convert any Gregorian date to the Ethiopian calendar — the Ge'ez calendar used in Ethiopia and Eritrea. The result shows the Ethiopian day, month name in English and Amharic script, the year in Era Ethiopica (EE) and the Ethiopian season. Furthermore, the tool flags when the selected date is Enkutatash — Ethiopian New Year on 1 Meskerem, which falls on 11 September in most Gregorian years.

English & Amharic month namesEthiopian New Year flag4-season indicatorEra Ethiopica (EE)13-month calendar

How to use the Ethiopian Date Converter

1
Enter any Gregorian date
Click the date field and select any date. Furthermore, the tool defaults to today, showing the current Ethiopian date immediately. Ethiopia is currently approximately 7 to 8 years behind the Gregorian calendar.
2
Read the Ethiopian date result
The result shows the Ethiopian day, month in English and Amharic, the EE year and the Ethiopian season. Furthermore, if the selected date is Ethiopian New Year (1 Meskerem), the table highlights this fact — Ethiopian New Year is one of Ethiopia's most important celebrations.
3
Note the 13-month structure
The Ethiopian calendar has 13 months — twelve of 30 days each plus Pagume (5 or 6 days at the year end). Furthermore, this 13th mini-month makes the total year 365 or 366 days, matching the solar year. Pagume is considered auspicious in Ethiopian tradition.
4
Convert Ethiopian to Gregorian
Click the Ethiopian → Gregorian tab. Enter the day, month and EE year. Furthermore, the Gregorian equivalent appears in long form, ISO and as the day of week.
5
Understand the Ethiopian year difference
Ethiopia is approximately 7 years behind the Gregorian calendar — which is why Ethiopians celebrate the new millennium in 2007 CE and celebrated 2000 EE in September 2007. Furthermore, the exact offset is 7 years before the Ethiopian New Year and 8 years after, because the Ethiopian year starts in September.

The thirteen months of the Ethiopian calendar

The Ethiopian calendar has twelve 30-day months plus a 13th short month called Pagume. Furthermore, the year starts on 1 Meskerem — Ethiopian New Year (Enkutatash) — which falls on 11 September in most Gregorian years and on 12 September in years preceding an Ethiopian leap year.

MonthAmharicDaysGregorian approx.
1. Meskeremመስከረም3011 Sep – 10 Oct
2. Tikimtቲክምት3011 Oct – 9 Nov
3. Hidarሕዳር3010 Nov – 9 Dec
4. Tahsasታሕሳስ3010 Dec – 8 Jan
5. Terጥር309 Jan – 7 Feb
6. Yekatitየካቲት308 Feb – 9 Mar
13. Pagumeጳጉሜ5 or 66–10 Sep (year-end)

How the Ethiopian calendar works

The Ethiopian calendar is based on the ancient Alexandrian calendar — the same root as the Coptic calendar. Furthermore, it follows the Julian leap year rule: every 4th year is a leap year (adding a 6th day to Pagume), without century-year exceptions. This makes it drift very slowly relative to the Gregorian calendar.

Ethiopian year ≈ Gregorian year − 7 (Sep–Dec) or − 8 (Jan–Aug)
New year = 1 Meskerem = 11 September (or 12 Sep before Ethiopian leap year)
Month length = 30 days × 12 months = 360 days + Pagume (5 or 6 days)
Leap year = every 4th year (Ethiopian year divisible by 4) — Pagume has 6 days
Epoch = 1 Meskerem 1 EE = 29 August 8 CE (Julian)

Worked example: Ethiopian New Year 2025

Ethiopian New Year (Enkutatash) falls on 1 Meskerem each year. For 2025 CE, when does Enkutatash occur?

Ethiopian dateGregorian equivalentEthiopian year begins
1 Meskerem 2018 EE11 September 2025 CEEthiopian year 2018
1 Meskerem 2017 EE11 September 2024 CEEthiopian year 2017
13 Pagume 2017 EE10 September 2025 CELast day of year 2017
Ethiopian New Year 2025 (1 Meskerem 2018 EE) falls on 11 September 2025. Furthermore, Ethiopia's New Year is 7 years "behind" the Gregorian calendar after September — explaining why Ethiopians celebrated 2000 EE in September 2007 CE. The 13th short month Pagume ends the old year before the new Meskerem begins.

What is the Ethiopian calendar?

The Ethiopian calendar — called the Ge'ez calendar — is the official calendar of Ethiopia and Eritrea. Furthermore, it has 13 months, starts in September and is approximately 7 to 8 years behind the Gregorian calendar. Ethiopia was about 7 years 3 months behind the Gregorian when it celebrated its millennium in 2007 CE.

The calendar derives from the Alexandrian calendar of ancient Egypt, modified to match Ethiopian Christian tradition. Furthermore, the year begins on 1 Meskerem — Enkutatash ("gift of jewels" in Amharic). Moreover, Enkutatash marks the end of the rainy season and the beginning of the clear spring — a double celebration.

Why Ethiopia has its own millennium

The Ethiopian calendar calculates the year of Jesus Christ's birth differently from the Gregorian calendar. Furthermore, Ethiopian scholars placed the Annunciation in 7 CE — 7 years later than the Gregorian calculation. This gap explains why the Ethiopian year is about 7 to 8 years behind the Gregorian. Moreover, Ethiopia celebrated its Year 2000 on 11 September 2007 CE — a major national celebration.

Why Ethiopian calendar conversion matters

Ethiopia is a significant economy in East Africa with a large diaspora community worldwide. Furthermore, official Ethiopian documents — birth certificates and government records — use Ethiopian Era (EE) dates. Converting these to Gregorian is necessary for international travel and university applications. Moreover, Ethiopian Airlines — Africa's largest carrier — uses Ethiopian calendar dates in some internal documents.

Ethiopian and Eritrean diaspora communities celebrate their New Year (Enkutatash) on 11 September — a date that requires calendar awareness in planning events in non-Ethiopian contexts. Furthermore, Ethiopian Orthodox Christmas (Genna) falls on 7 January Gregorian and Timkat (Ethiopian Epiphany) on 19 January — dates derived from the Ethiopian liturgical calendar. Moreover, business interactions with Ethiopia require understanding that official dates on government documents use the EE system.

The Ethiopian calendar in international business

Contracts and agreements involving Ethiopian parties may reference Ethiopian Era dates for key milestones. Furthermore, understanding that a contract dated "1 Hamle 2016 EE" corresponds to 8 July 2024 CE requires a calendar converter. Moreover, annual report dates, audit periods and fiscal year references in Ethiopian corporate documents all use EE dating.

Frequently asked questions

Ethiopia uses a calendar based on the ancient Alexandrian calendar, which calculated the year of Christ's birth approximately 7 years later than the calculation used to create the Gregorian calendar. Furthermore, this difference has never been corrected in Ethiopia — the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church preserved its own calendar tradition independently. As a result, Ethiopia celebrated its Year 2000 (2000 EE) on 11 September 2007 CE, with the slogan "13 months of sunshine."
Ethiopian New Year — Enkutatash — falls on 1 Meskerem, which corresponds to 11 September in most Gregorian years and 12 September in years preceding an Ethiopian leap year. Furthermore, Enkutatash marks the end of Ethiopia's rainy season (Kiremt) and the beginning of a season of sunshine and wildflowers. Moreover, it is Ethiopia's most joyous public holiday, celebrated with church services, songs, dancing and the sharing of flowers.
The Ethiopian calendar has 13 months. Furthermore, twelve months have exactly 30 days each, giving 360 days. The 13th month — Pagume — has 5 days in normal years and 6 days in Ethiopian leap years. Pagume follows the 12th month (Nehase) and immediately precedes Ethiopian New Year. Moreover, this structure ensures the total year is 365 or 366 days, matching the solar year.
For Gregorian year 2025, the Ethiopian year is 2017 EE for dates before 11 September 2025, and 2018 EE for dates from 11 September 2025 onwards. Furthermore, Ethiopian years are approximately 7 to 8 years behind Gregorian years. The tool calculates the exact EE year for any date you enter, handling the September new year boundary automatically.
The Ethiopian and Coptic calendars are very similar — both derive from the ancient Alexandrian calendar and have 13 months of 30 days plus a short intercalary month. Furthermore, the Coptic calendar uses Coptic month names while the Ethiopian calendar uses Ge'ez/Amharic names. Moreover, the Coptic year starts on 29 August (Nayrouz) while the Ethiopian year starts on 11 September (Enkutatash) — a difference of 13 days. The year numbers also differ: the Coptic Era starts from 284 CE while the Ethiopian Era starts from approximately 8 CE.

Related Date & Time tools

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

Coptic Calendar Converter

Convert dates to the Coptic calendar used by Egyptian Christians. Furthermore, Coptic month names and Nayrouz (Coptic New Year) are shown.

Gregorian to Hijri Converter

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

Julian to Gregorian Converter

Convert Old Style Julian calendar dates to Gregorian. Furthermore, the 1582 reform and the century-difference table are shown.

Moon Phase Calculator

Find the moon phase for any date. Furthermore, Ethiopian and East African lunar calendars also follow the lunar cycle.

Days Until Calculator

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

Date Difference Calculator

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

Rate this tool

4.5
out of 5
303 ratings
5 ★
71%
4 ★
18%
3 ★
4%
2 ★
3%
1 ★
4%
How useful was this tool?