120 Business Days From Today
This calculation excludes weekends (Saturday and Sunday) only. Public holidays are not excluded and may vary by country or region.
120 business days from today is:
What 120 Business Days Actually Means
120 work days — about 24.0 work weeks (168 calendar days)
120 business days is a long-range working deadline — about 24.0 work weeks, translating to roughly 168 calendar days once weekends are added back in. Timeframes this long are found in enterprise procurement, federal permitting, and extended commercial underwriting windows.
Over 120 business days you'll typically see 24–25 weekends and at least one public holiday in most countries. The more important the deadline, the more worth it is to confirm which holiday calendar the count uses — different regulators and different jurisdictions disagree.
Common Uses for a 120-Business-Day Window
- Federal permitting and regulatory review
- Enterprise vendor procurement cycles
- Commercial real estate closing timelines
- Extended professional certification review
- Long-duration public-comment periods
Did you know?
When a business-day deadline falls on a holiday that's observed in some regions but not others, most courts default to the jurisdiction of the filing party — which occasionally lets filers "shop" holidays for an extra day.
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 120 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 120 business days, the actual calendar span is typically around 168 days, with the exact number shown above.