10 Business Days From Today
This calculation excludes weekends (Saturday and Sunday) only. Public holidays are not excluded and may vary by country or region.
10 business days from today is:
What 10 Business Days Actually Means
two work weeks
Ten business days is two full work weeks (Monday–Friday, twice). Because it spans two weekends, ten business days always equals fourteen calendar days — exactly two weeks to the same weekday. This alignment makes "ten business days" a popular deadline: predictable for scheduling, but long enough to actually do meaningful work.
Most US companies use ten business days as the standard window for background checks, reference verification, and internal transfer approval. It's also a common window for legal discovery responses and for commercial insurance quote turnarounds.
Common Uses for a 10-Business-Day Window
- Standard employment background check turnaround
- Commercial insurance quote and underwriting windows
- Legal discovery response default timeframes
- Mid-priority internal corporate approvals
Did you know?
Many US federal statutes use "ten days" without specifying calendar or business — and FRCP Rule 6 actually converts these: if the deadline is under 11 days, intermediate weekends and holidays are excluded from the count.
How Business Days Are Counted Here
Business days (also called working days or weekdays) are Monday through Friday. This calculator starts from today and counts forward 10 weekdays, skipping every Saturday and Sunday. Public holidays are not excluded, because they vary by country and region — if your deadline uses a specific holiday calendar, double-check against it. For 10 business days, the actual calendar span is typically around 14 days, with the exact number shown above.