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Business Day Calculator

Business Days in July 2053 for Mexico

July 2053 has 23 días hábiles under the Mexican federal holiday calendar. July 2053 contains no Mexican federal holidays on a weekday. The month covers 31 calendar days, of which 8 are sábado and domingo. That count drives invoice cycles, payroll runs, and any contract that defines deadlines as a number of días hábiles in Mexico.

días hábiles

23

Calendar Days

31

Weekend Days

8

días de descanso obligatorio

0

Work Weeks

4.6

July 2053 business day calendar
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
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días de descanso obligatorio in July 2053

No Mexican federal holidays fall on a weekday in July 2053, so banks and Mexico financial markets keep their regular schedule for the entire month.

Mexico July deadlines

July 17 is the SAT declaración mensual deadline for June. The annual corporate income tax (ISR) filing for calendar-year entities was due March 31 but follow-up declarations continue. The Banco de México publishes the Quarterly Inflation Report. Vacation season clusters mid-July through August for many Mexican corporates.

Day-of-week distribution

The count of each weekday in July 2053. 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

Mexico reporting cycles and business-day rules

Mexican business-day cycles align with SAT declaración mensual deadlines on the 17th of the following month, IMSS cuotas obreras and INFONAVIT bimonthly contributions, and CFDI 4.0 invoice issuance against the buyer's pago timeline. Banxico operates SPEI as a near-real-time interbank clearing system; bank cutoffs typically run to 18:00 local time. The 2006 reform under the Ley Federal del Trabajo moved Día de la Constitución, Natalicio de Benito Juárez, and Día de la Revolución to Mondays, producing predictable three-day weekends. Article 74 governs the seven mandatory federal labor holidays.

July 2053 días hábiles compared by country

Working-day counts vary across countries because each country observes its own public holidays. The table below puts Mexico alongside the other ten supported holiday calendars for July 2053.

How July 2053 compares year over year

July 2052 also had 23 días hábiles, so working capacity is unchanged year over year. On the surrounding months, June 2053 has 21 días hábiles and August 2053 has 21. Looking forward, July 2054 has 23 días hábiles under the same Mexican federal holiday calendar.

Using this calculator in Mexico

A Mexico City-based controller uses the 23-day July 2053 count to align SAT declaración mensual deadlines on the 17th with IMSS cuota cutoffs and INFONAVIT bimonthly remittances. A Monterrey maquiladora uses the count to schedule CFDI 4.0 issuance against monthly closing. A Guadalajara fintech treasury uses días hábiles math to track Banxico SPEI clearing windows and Comisión Nacional Bancaria reporting deadlines.

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 July 2053 for Mexico?
July 2053 has 23 días hábiles under the Mexican federal holiday calendar. The month spans 31 calendar days, of which 8 fall on a weekend and 0 are Mexican federal holidays that lands on a weekday. The remaining 23 weekdays are countable as días hábiles for invoicing, deadline tracking, and contract math.
Which Mexico holidays affect July 2053?
July 2053 contains no Mexican federal holidays that fall on a weekday. Banks, the central clearing system, and Mexico financial markets keep their normal schedule throughout the month under this calculator's national-only holiday set.
Why are some Mexican holidays observed on Mondays and others on fixed dates?
The 2006 reform to Article 74 of the Ley Federal del Trabajo moved three holidays from fixed dates to Monday observance. Día de la Constitución (originally February 5) is now the first Monday of February. Natalicio de Benito Juárez (originally March 21) is now the third Monday of March. Día de la Revolución (originally November 20) is now the third Monday of November. Día de la Independencia (September 16), Día del Trabajo (May 1), and Navidad (December 25) remain on fixed dates regardless of weekday.
How is presidential transmission day handled here?
December 1 every six years is Día de la transmisión del Poder Ejecutivo Federal, when the new federal executive takes office. This is a labor holiday under Article 74, fraction VII of the LFT for that specific year only. The most recent transmission was December 1, 2024 (the start of Claudia Sheinbaum's term); the next is December 1, 2030. This calculator's Mexico data includes December 1 for transmission years and excludes it for non-transmission years, consistent with banking-sector practice.
Why does the business-day count vary year to year?
Two things shift the monthly count for Mexico. First, the day of the week the first of the month lands on changes the count of each weekday. Second, Mexican 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. July 2052 also had 23 días hábiles, so working capacity is unchanged year over year.

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