Jewish Date Today
As of Wednesday, May 20, 2026 at 7:15 PM, today's Hebrew (Jewish) date is:
Today's Hebrew (Jewish) date — full detail
- Date
- 4 Sivan 5786
- Hebrew
- ד׳ סִיוָן תשפ״ו
- Short form
- 4 Sivan 5786
- Month
- Sivan
- Year
- 5786 AM (Anno Mundi — 'in the year of the world')
- Weekday
- Yom Revi'i · יוֹם רְבִיעִי
- Gregorian
- Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Why today matters
Today falls in Sivan, the month of Shavuot (the Festival of Weeks), which commemorates the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai. Shavuot is observed on the 6th of Sivan. Shavuot is observed on the 6th (and in the diaspora, also the 7th) of Sivan. Many communities hold an all-night Torah study session — the Tikkun Leil Shavuot — in remembrance of the night before the giving of the Torah at Sinai. Dairy foods, especially cheesecake, are traditional. The Book of Ruth is read.
On the third new moon after the Israelites left Egypt, on that very day, they came to the wilderness of Sinai. — Exodus 19:1
How we compute this
Hebrew (Jewish) is a lunisolar calendar. Each year contains 353, 354, 355 (common); 383, 384, 385 (leap) days, with each month averaging 29 or 30 days, set by lunar months. Years are counted from 1 Tishrei 1 AM = 7 October 3761 BCE (traditional date of creation) (era: AM (Anno Mundi — 'in the year of the world')).
The Jewish calendar is the oldest continuously-used calendar in the world, governing Jewish religious life since biblical times. Hillel II — patriarch of the Jewish community in the Land of Israel — published the mathematical version of the calendar in 359 CE, replacing the older system in which the Sanhedrin in Jerusalem proclaimed each new month after receiving witness testimony of the crescent moon. The current calendar uses a 19-year Metonic cycle (years 3, 6, 8, 11, 14, 17, and 19 are leap years with a 13th month, Adar II) to keep Passover in spring and Sukkot in autumn. Every observant Jew's daily prayers, every wedding date, every yahrzeit anniversary, every bar/bat mitzvah, and every yom tov — all are anchored to this calendar. It is not merely a method of marking time; it is the architecture of Jewish religious memory.
Used by: ≈15 million Jews worldwide. Regions: Used for religious observance and the civil calendar in Israel.