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Business Days in January 2002 for Germany

January 2002 has 23 Arbeitstage under the German federal holiday calendar. January 2002 contains no German federal holidays on a weekday. The month covers 31 calendar days, of which 8 are Samstag and Sonntag. That count drives invoice cycles, payroll runs, and any contract that defines deadlines as a number of Arbeitstage in Germany.

Arbeitstage

23

Calendar Days

31

Weekend Days

8

bundesweite Feiertage

0

Work Weeks

4.6

January 2002 business day calendar
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
1
2
3
4
5
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6
wknd
7
8
9
10
11
12
wknd
13
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31

bundesweite Feiertage in January 2002

No German federal holidays fall on a weekday in January 2002, so banks and Germany financial markets keep their regular schedule for the entire month.

Germany January deadlines

January is the heaviest month of the German tax year for payroll. Lohnsteueranmeldung for December is due January 10 (or the next Werktag). Sozialversicherungsbeiträge for January are due on the third-to-last bank working day of the month. GoBD record-keeping windows reset for the new year, and DATEV monthly close cycles run on Arbeitstage.

Day-of-week distribution

The count of each weekday in January 2002. Useful for shift scheduling, weekly recurring billing, and any rota that depends on a specific weekday landing in-month.

DayCount
Monday4
Tuesday5
Wednesday5
Thursday5
Friday4
Saturday4
Sunday4

Germany reporting cycles and business-day rules

German business-day cycles align with Lohnsteueranmeldung on the 10th of each month (next Bankarbeitstag if it falls on a weekend or Feiertag), Sozialversicherungsbeiträge on the third-to-last Bankarbeitstag, and quarterly Umsatzsteuer-Voranmeldung. SEPA Credit Transfer settles next-business-day; SEPA Instant runs around the clock but classic SCT respects Bankarbeitstage. BaFin MaRisk reporting under AnaCredit and FinaRisikoV follows monthly and quarterly cycles. §193 BGB rolls weekend or Feiertag deadlines to the next Werktag, which this calculator's Arbeitstage definition implements.

January 2002 Arbeitstage compared by country

Working-day counts vary across countries because each country observes its own public holidays. The table below puts Germany alongside the other ten supported holiday calendars for January 2002.

How January 2002 compares year over year

January 2001 also had 23 Arbeitstage, so working capacity is unchanged year over year. On the surrounding months, December 2001 has 21 Arbeitstage and February 2002 has 20. Looking forward, January 2003 has 23 Arbeitstage under the same German federal holiday calendar.

Using this calculator in Germany

A Munich-based Mittelstand controller uses the 23-day January 2002 count to align DATEV monthly close with Lohnsteueranmeldung deadlines on the 10th and the Sozialversicherung deadline on the third-to-last Bankarbeitstag. A Frankfurt asset manager uses business-day math to track BaFin MaRisk and AnaCredit reporting windows. A Hamburg logistics firm uses Arbeitstage counts to align Skonto windows under §271 BGB with Bundesbank settlement.

For informational purposes only

This calculator provides general estimates based on business day counting rules. It does not constitute legal advice. Deadlines in legal, regulatory, or contractual matters may be subject to jurisdiction-specific rules, court orders, or statutory exceptions. Always verify critical deadlines with a qualified professional.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many business days are in January 2002 for Germany?
January 2002 has 23 Arbeitstage under the German federal holiday calendar. The month spans 31 calendar days, of which 8 fall on a weekend and 0 are German federal holidays that lands on a weekday. The remaining 23 weekdays are countable as Arbeitstage for invoicing, deadline tracking, and contract math.
Which Germany holidays affect January 2002?
January 2002 contains no German federal holidays that fall on a weekday. Banks, the central clearing system, and Germany financial markets keep their normal schedule throughout the month under this calculator's national-only holiday set.
Why is this calendar federal only, not state-specific?
Germany's Grundgesetz delegates Feiertagsrecht to the 16 Bundesländer, each of which passes its own Feiertagsgesetz. Bavaria observes 13 holidays in most areas (the most), while Berlin observes 10. The nine bundesweite Feiertage in this calculator are the intersection observed in every Bundesland: Neujahrstag, Karfreitag, Ostermontag, Tag der Arbeit, Christi Himmelfahrt, Pfingstmontag, Tag der Deutschen Einheit, Erster Weihnachtstag, and Zweiter Weihnachtstag. State-specific days such as Heilige Drei Könige, Fronleichnam, Allerheiligen, Reformationstag, Mariä Himmelfahrt, and Buß- und Bettag are not included.
How does §193 BGB shift deadlines that land on a Feiertag?
§193 BGB rolls any deadline (Frist) that falls on a Sonntag, gesetzlicher Feiertag, or Samstag (under the Arbeitstage reading) to the next Werktag. This applies to civil-law contractual deadlines automatically and to many statutory deadlines under §187 to §193 BGB. For payment terms, Skonto windows, and Zahlungsziele, the rule means a 10-day Skonto window starting Monday and ending Karfreitag actually pays through Ostermontag and into Dienstag without losing the discount. This calculator's Arbeitstage count implements that shift.
Why does the business-day count vary year to year?
Two things shift the monthly count for Germany. First, the day of the week the first of the month lands on changes the count of each weekday. Second, German federal holidays anchored to a fixed date shift their weekday across years. Some years a fixed-date holiday lands on a weekend; some countries shift the observance to an adjacent weekday and some absorb it into the weekend. January 2001 also had 23 Arbeitstage, so working capacity is unchanged year over year.

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