Lunar Date Today
As of Thursday, May 21, 2026 at 9:01 AM, today's Lunar (East Asian Lunisolar) date is:
Today's Lunar (East Asian Lunisolar) date — full detail
- Date
- 2nd day of the 4th lunar month, Year of the Horse
- Chinese characters
- 丙午年 四月初二
- Short form
- 丙午年四月二日
- Year
- 2026 60-year sexagenary cycle (gānzhī), current cycle began 1984
- Weekday
- Xīngqī Yī (Monday)
- Gregorian
- Thursday, May 21, 2026
- Current sexagenary year
- Bīngwǔ (丙午) — year 43 of the cycle
- Heavenly Stem
- Bīng (丙) — Yáng Fire
- Earthly Branch
- Wǔ (午) — Horse (12 noon)
- Element pairing
- Fire over Fire — heightened expressive energy
- Next leap month
- 4th leap month (闰四月) in lunar year 2028
Why today matters
Today is the 2nd day of the 4th lunar month — a date determined by the most recent new moon and the position of the sun against the 24 solar terms (jiéqì). The lunisolar system is one of humanity's great astronomical achievements: a calendar that simultaneously tracks the moon's phases (for daily life and tides) and the sun's position (for agriculture and seasons), inserting an extra "leap month" approximately every three years to keep the two in alignment.
"The lunisolar calendar is not behind the moon, nor behind the sun. It walks between them." — Traditional Chinese astronomical maxim
How we compute this
Lunar (East Asian Lunisolar) is a lunisolar calendar. Each year contains 353–355 days (common); 383–385 days (leap year with intercalary month), with each month averaging 29.5306 days (synodic lunar month), implemented as alternating 29- or 30-day months. Years are counted from Astronomically based — synchronized to new moons and solar terms (era: 60-year sexagenary cycle (gānzhī), current cycle began 1984).
The lunisolar system used across East Asia today descends from the Chinese calendar, refined under the Han dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE) and given its modern arithmetic form during the Yuan and Ming dynasties. The 60-year gānzhī cycle pairs ten "heavenly stems" (天干) — derived from the wǔxíng (five elements) crossed with yīn/yáng — with twelve "earthly branches" (地支), the familiar zodiac animals. The same calendar, with minor regional adjustments, governs Korean Seollal, Vietnamese Tết, and Mongolian Tsagaan Sar — making it the timekeeping system of roughly 22% of humanity.
Used by: ~1.7 billion across East and Southeast Asia. Regions: Used for festivals in China, Taiwan, Korea (Seollal), Vietnam (Tết), Mongolia (Tsagaan Sar), Singapore, Malaysia.