Court Deadline Calculator

Count calendar or business days to compute litigation deadlines accurately

Calculate court deadlines by adding calendar or business days to a trigger date. Excludes weekends and U.S. federal holidays, rolls deadlines that land on a closed day forward to the next business day, and shows the exact due date and day count. It runs free in your browser on Gera Tools, with nothing uploaded.

Last updated Source: Gera Tools

Does this count the trigger date itself?

No. By default the trigger date is day zero and counting begins the next day, mirroring the common rule in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 6(a) and most state analogues. You can disable that exclusion if your rule counts from day one.

A court deadline calculator turns a triggering event and a rule-based period into an exact due date. Litigators live by deadlines — a response, a motion, an appeal, or service of process — and miscounting by a single day can forfeit a right. This tool adds a period of calendar days or business days to a trigger date, applies the standard “exclude the trigger day” convention, and rolls any deadline that lands on a weekend or U.S. federal holiday forward to the next open court day.

How it works

The engine starts from your trigger date and, by default, treats it as day zero — counting begins the following day, the rule found in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 6(a)(1) and mirrored in most state codes.

In calendar-day mode it simply advances the date by the full period, then checks the landing day: if it is a Saturday, Sunday, or federal holiday, the deadline rolls forward to the next business day.

In business-day mode it advances one day at a time, counting only days that are not weekends or holidays, until it has counted the requested number of business days. The result is therefore always a business day already.

Federal holidays are computed each year, including floating rules such as the third Monday in January, and the observed-weekday shift when a holiday lands on a Saturday (observed Friday) or Sunday (observed Monday).

Due date = trigger date + period, with weekend/holiday roll-forward applied to the final day.

Example and notes

Suppose a complaint is served on a Friday and the answer is due in 21 calendar days. Twenty-one days later is a Friday again — a business day — so the deadline stands. But if 21 days landed on a federal holiday Monday, it would roll to Tuesday.

For a 10 business-day motion response, the tool skips four weekend days (and any holiday), so the deadline falls roughly two calendar weeks out. Always cross-check the governing rule and any local standing orders: state court holiday lists and “three-day mail” additions are matter-specific and are not assumed here.