Date format by country

The legal and cultural expectations for date and time representation vary between countries, and it is important to be aware of the forms of all-numeric calendar dates used in a particular country to know what date is intended.

Writers have traditionally written abbreviated dates according to their local custom, creating all-numeric equivalents to dates such as, "5 February 2021" (05/02/21, 05/02/2021, 05-02-2021 or 05.02.2021) and "February 5, 2021" (02/05/21 or 02/05/2021). This can result in dates that are impossible to understand correctly without knowing the writer's origin and/or other contextual details, as dates such as "10/11/06" can be interpreted as "10 November 2006" in the DMY format, "October 11, 2006" in MDY, and "2010 November 6" in YMD.

The ISO 8601 format YYYY-MM-DD (2021-02-05 [refresh]) is intended to harmonize these formats and ensure accuracy in all situations. Many countries have adopted it as their sole official date format, though even in these areas writers may adopt abbreviated formats that are no longer recommended.

Usage map

Color Order styles End Main regions and countries
(population of each region in millions)
Total
population
(millions)
  Cyan
DMYLEurope: Italy (60), Ukraine (42), Netherlands (17), others (95)
North America: Mexico (127)
Central America: Guatemala (18), Honduras (9.2), others (19)
South America: Brazil (210), Colombia (46), Argentina (45), Peru (32), Venezuela (32), others (43)
North Africa: Egypt (99), Algeria (43), Morocco (35), Tunisia (12), others (11)
West, Central, and Southern Africa: Nigeria (193), Ethiopia (99), DRC (87), Tanzania (56), Sudan (41), Uganda (40), others (323)
West Asia and the Middle East: Turkey (82), Iraq (40), Saudi Arabia (33), Yemen (30), others (107)
Central Asia: Tajikistan (8.9), Kyrgyzstan (6.4), Turkmenistan (5.9)
East Asia: Indonesia (268), Thailand (66), Cambodia (16), others (8.9)
South Asia: Pakistan (212), Bangladesh (166),
Oceania: various Caribbean islands (26), Papua New Guinea (8.6), New Zealand (5.0), Australia (25), others (5.5)
2,871
  Yellow
YMDBChina (1,397), Japan (126), South Korea (52), Canada (37), North Korea (25), Taiwan (24), Hungary (10), Mongolia (3.3), Lithuania (2.8), Bhutan (0.74). 1,678
  Magenta
MDYMSome U.S. island territories (0.55) 0.55
  Green
DMY, YMDL, BIndia (1,346), Russia (147), Vietnam (95), Germany (83), Iran (82), France (67), United Kingdom (66), Myanmar (54), Spain (47), Poland (38), Uzbekistan (33), Afghanistan (32), Nepal (30), Cameroon (24), Sri Lanka (22), others (120) 2,391
  Blue
DMY, MDYL, MPhilippines (107), Malaysia (33), Somalia (16), Togo (7.5), Panama (4.2), Puerto Rico (3.2), Cayman Islands (0.63), Greenland (0.056) 171.6
  Red
MDY, YMDM, BUnited States (329) 329
  Grey
MDY, YMD, DMYM, B, LKenya (52), Ghana (30) 82

Listing

Table coding

All examples use example date 2006-04-22 / 2006 April 22 / 22 April 2006 / April 22, 2006 – except where a single-digit day is illustrated.

Basic components of a calendar date for the most common calendar systems:

D – day
M – month
Y – year

Order of the basic components:

Bbig-endian (year, month, day), e.g. 2006-04-22 or 2006.04.22 or 2006/04/22 or 2006 April 22
Llittle-endian (day, month, year), e.g. 22.04.2006 or 22/4/2006 or 22-04-2006 or 22 April 2006
Mmiddle-endian (month, day, year), e.g. 04/22/2006 or April 22, 2006

Specific formats for the basic components:

yy – two-digit year, e.g. 06
yyyy – four-digit year, e.g. 2006
m – one-digit month for months below 10, e.g. 4
mm – two-digit month, e.g. 04
mmm – three-letter abbreviation for month, e.g. Apr
mmmm – month spelled out in full, e.g. April
d – one-digit day of the month for days below 10, e.g. 2
dd – two-digit day of the month, e.g. 02
ddd – three-letter abbreviation for day of the week, e.g. Tue
dddd – day of the week spelled out in full, e.g. Tuesday

Separators of the components:

"/" – stroke (slash)
"." – dots or full stops/points (periods)
"-" – hyphens or dashes
" " – spaces
Country All-numeric date format Details ISO 8601
YMD DMY MDY
AfghanistanYesYesNoShort format: d/m/yyyy (Year first, month, and day in right-to-left writing direction)
Long format: yyyy mmmm d (Day first, full month name, and year in right-to-left writing direction)
Åland IslandsYesYesNoShort format: yyyy-mm-dd
Long format: d mmmm yyyy
AlbaniaYesYesNodd/mm/yyyy
Some YMD[1][2][3]
AlgeriaNoYesNo[4] (dd/mm/yyyy)[5]
American SamoaNoNoYes
AndorraNoYesNo
AngolaNoYesNo
AnguillaNoYesNo
Antigua and BarbudaNoYesNo
ArgentinaNoYesNoNumeric format: yyyyMMdd (Example: 20030613)
Short format: dd/MM/yy (Example: 13/06/03)
Medium format: dd/MM/yyyy (Example: 13/06/2003)
Long format: d' de 'MMMM' de 'yyyy (Example: 13 de junio de 2003)
Full format: EEEE d' de 'MMMM' de 'yyyy (Example: viernes 13 de junio de 2003).[6]
ArmeniaNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[7][8]
ArubaNoYesNo
AscensionNoYesNo
AustraliaNoYesNommmm d, yyyy is sometimes used, usually informally in the mastheads of magazines, schools, newspapers,[9][10] advertisements, video games, News, and TV shows. MDY in numeric-only form is never used. AS ISO 8601-2007
AustriaYesYesNo(Using dots (which denote ordinal numbering) as in d.m.(yy)yy or sometimes d. month (yy)yy).[11][12] ÖNORM ISO 8601
AzerbaijanNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[13]
BahamasNoYesNo
BahrainNoYesNo[14]
BangladeshNoYesNoNot officially standardised. Bengali calendar dates are also used: দদ-মম-বববব
BarbadosNoYesNo BNS 50:2000[15]
BelarusNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[16][17]
BelgiumNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[18][19][20] NBN Z 01-002
BelizeNoYesNo[21]
BeninNoYesNo
BermudaNoYesNo
BhutanYesNoNo
BoliviaNoYesNo[22]
BonaireNoYesNo
Bosnia and HerzegovinaNoYesNo(d. m. yyyy. or d. mmmm yyyy.)
BotswanaYesYesNoyyyy-mm-dd for Setswana and dd/mm/yyyy for English
BrazilNoYesNo(dd/mm/yyyy)[23][24]
British Indian Ocean TerritoryNoYesNo
British Virgin IslandsNoYesNo
BruneiNoYesNo[25]
BulgariaNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[26][27]
Burkina FasoNoYesNo
BurundiNoYesNo
CambodiaNoYesNoShort format: dd/mm/yy
Long format: d mmmm yyyy
CameroonYesYesNo(d)d/(m)m/yyyy or d mmmm yyyy for Aghem, Bafia, Basaa, Duala, English, Ewondo, French, Fula, Kako, Kwasio, Mundang, Ngiemboon and Yangben

yyyy-mm-dd for Meta' and Ngomba

CanadaYesYesYesISO 8601 is the only format that the Government of Canada and Standards Council of Canada officially recommend for all-numeric dates.[28][29][30] But, their usage differs depending of many contexts.[31][32]

All three formats are used in Canada for long format.

For English speakers, MDY was preferred form (mmm-dd-yyyy) (Example: April 9, 2019) and used by nearly all English language publications and media companies as well as majority of English language government documents.

For both French and sometimes English speakers, DMY are used (dd-mmm-yyyy) (Example: 9 April 2019/le 9 avril 2019) and also used in formal letters, academic papers, military, many media companies and even some governmental documents, particularly in French-language ones.

Federal regulations for shelf life dates on perishable goods mandate a year/month/day format, but allow the month to be written in full, in both official languages, or with a set of standardized two-letter bilingual codes such as 2019 JA 07 or 19 JA 07.

CAN/CSA-Z234.4-89 (R2007)[33]
Cape VerdeNoYesNo
Cayman IslandsNoYesYesDMY and MDY are used interchangeably. Official forms generally tend towards DMY. Month is often spelled out to avoid confusion.
Central African RepublicNoYesNo
ChadNoYesNo
ChileNoYesNo[34]
ChinaYesNoNoNational standard format is yyyy-mm-dd (with leading zeroes) and (yy)yy(m)m(d)d (with or without leading zeroes)

Uyghur languages in Xinjiang usually give date examples in the form 2017-يىل 18-ئاۋغۇست or 2017-8-18 (i.e. yyyy-d-mmm) but this form is never used when writing in Chinese;[35] casually many people use (yy)yy/(m)m/(d)d or (yy)yy.(m)m.(d)d (with or without leading zeroes). See Dates in Chinese.

GB/T 7408-2005
Christmas IslandNoYesNo
Cocos (Keeling) IslandsNoYesNo
ColombiaNoYesNo[36]
ComorosNoYesNo
Congo
(East and West)
NoYesNo
Cook IslandsNoYesNo
Costa RicaNoYesNo[37]
CroatiaNoYesNo(d. m. yyyy. or d. mmmm yyyy.)[38][39] See Date and time notation in Croatia for details on cases used.
CubaYesYesNo[40]
CuraçaoNoYesNo
CyprusNoYesNodd/mm/yyyy [41]
Czech RepublicNoYesNo(d. m. yyyy or d. month yyyy)[42][43] ČSN ISO 8601
DenmarkYesYesNoExamples: Long date: 7. juni 1994. Long date with weekday: onsdag(,) den 21. december 1994. Numeric date: 1994-06-07[44]

(The format dd.mm.(yy)yy is the traditional Danish date format.[45] The international format yyyy-mm-dd or yyyymmdd is also accepted, though this format is not commonly used. The formats d. 'month name' yyyy and in handwriting d/m-yy or d/m yyyy are also acceptable.[46])

DS/ISO 8601:2005[47]
DjiboutiYesYesNoShort format: dd/mm/yyyy (Day first, month number and year in left-to-right writing direction) in Afar, French and Somali ("d/m/yy" is a common alternative). Gregorian dates follow the same rules but tend to be written in the yyyy/m/d format (Day first, month number, and year in right-to-left writing direction) in Arabic language.

Long format: d mmmm yyyy or mmmm dd, yyyy (Day first, full month name, and year or first full month name, day, and year, in left-to-right writing direction) in Afar, French and Somali and yyyy ،mmmm d (Day first, full month name, and year in right-to-left writing direction) in Arabic

DominicaNoYesNo
Dominican RepublicNoYesNo[48]
East TimorNoYesNo
EcuadorNoYesNo[49]
EgyptNoYesNo[50][51]
El SalvadorNoYesNo[52]
Equatorial GuineaNoYesNo(dd/mm/yyyy or d mmmm yyyy) for French and Spanish
EritreaYesYesNoShort format: dd/mm/yyyy for Afar, Bilen, English, Saho, Tigre and Tigrinya. Gregorian dates follow the same rules but tend to be written in the yyyy/m/d (Day first, month number and year in right-to-left writing direction) format in Arabic language.

Long format: D MMMM YYYY (Day first, full month name, and year in left-to-right writing direction) for Bilen, English, Tigre and Tigrinya, YYYY ،MMMM D (Day first, full month name, and year in right-to-left writing direction) for Arabic and MMMM DD, YYYY (First full month name, day and year in left-to-right writing direction) for Afar and Saho

EstoniaNoYesNodd.mm.yyyy, d.m.(yy)yy or d. mmmm yyyy (mmmm may be substituted by Roman numerals)[53]
Eswatini (Swaziland)YesYesNoYMD (in Swati), DMY (in English)
EthiopiaNoYesNo(dd/mm/yyyy or dd mmmm yyyy) for Amharic, Tigrinya and Wolaytta

(dd/mm/yyyy or mmmm dd, yyyy) for Afar, Oromo and Somali[54]

Falkland IslandsNoYesNo
Faroe IslandsNoYesNo
Federated States of MicronesiaNoNoYes[55]
FinlandNoYesNoFinnish: d.m.yyyy[56] or in long format d. mmmm yyyy
Inari Sami: mmmm d. p. yyyy
Northern Sami: mmmm d. b. yyyy
Skolt Sami: mmmm d. p. yyyy
Swedish: d mmmm yyyy
(Note: Month and year can be shortened)
FijiNoYesNo
FranceYesYesNo(dd/mm/yyyy) for Alsatian, Catalan, Corsican, French and Occitan[57][58]

(yyyy-mm-dd) for Breton, Basque and Interlingua

NF Z69-200
French GuianaNoYesNo
French PolynesiaNoYesNo
GabonNoYesNo
GambiaNoYesNo
GeorgiaNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy) (In Georgian calendar dates, century digits may be omitted, e.g., dd-mm-yy.)
GermanyYesYesNoThe format dd.mm.yyyy using dots (which denote ordinal numbering) is the traditional German date format.[59] Since 1996-05-01, the international format yyyy-mm-dd has become the official standard date format, but the handwritten form d. mmmm yyyy is also accepted (see DIN 5008). Standardisation applies to all applications in the scope of the standard including uses in government, education, engineering and sciences. Since 2006, the old format (d)d.(m)m.(yy)yy is allowed again as alternative to the yyyy-mm-dd format in areas where there is no risk of ambiguation. See Date and time notation in Europe. DIN ISO 8601:2006-09, used in DIN 5008:2011-04[60]
GhanaYesYesYes(yyyy/mm/dd) for Akan

(dd/mm/yyyy)

(m/d/yyyy) for Ewe

GibraltarNoYesNo
GreeceNoYesNo[61][62] ELOT EN 28601
GreenlandNoYesNoDanish: d. mmmm yyyy
Greenlandic: mmmm d.-at, yyyy[63]
GrenadaNoYesNo
GuadeloupeNoYesNo
GuamNoNoYes
GuatemalaNoYesNoShort format: dd/mm/yyyy
Long format: d de mmmm de yyyy or dddd, d de mmmm de yyyy[64]
GuernseyNoYesNo
GuineaYesYesNoShort format: dd/mm/yyyy (Day first, month and year in left-to-right writing direction) in French and Fulah. Gregorian dates follow the same rules but tend to be written in yyyy/mm/dd (Day first, month number, and year in right-to-left writing direction) format in N'ko language.

Long format: D MMMM YYYY (Day first, month and year in left-to-right writing direction) for French and Fulah and YYYY, DD MMMM (First full month name, day, and year in right-to-left writing direction) for N'ko

Guinea-BissauNoYesNo
GuyanaNoYesNo
HaitiNoYesNo
Hong KongYesYesNo(yy)yymd (with no leading zeros) for Chinese[65] and (d)d/(m)m/(yy)yy for English

Both expanded forms dd-mmmm-yyyy and mmmm-dd-yyyy are used interchangeably in Hong Kong, except the latter was more frequently used in media publications and commercial purpose, such as The Standard

HondurasNoYesNo[66]
HungaryYesNoNoyyyy. mm. (d)d.

The year is always written with Arabic numerals. The number of the month is usually written with Arabic numerals but it also can be written with Roman numerals, or the month's full name can be written out, the first letter not being capitalised. The day is also written with Arabic numerals.[67][68][69][70] English language materials use DMY.

MSZ ISO 8601:2003
IcelandNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[71][72] IST EN 28601:1992
IndiaYesYesNoIn India, the DD-MM-YY is the predominant short form of the numeric date usage. Almost all government documents need to be filled up in the DD-MM-YYYY format. An example of DD-MM-YYYY usage is the passport application form.[73][74][75] Though not yet a common practice, the BIS (Bureau of Indian Standards) of the Government of India introduced the standard named "IS 7900:2001 (Revised in 2006) Data Elements And Interchange Formats – Information Interchange – Representation Of Dates And Times" which officially recommends use of the date format YYYYMMDD, for example, 20130910 or 2013 09 10, or 2013-09-10 for the date 10 September 2013; in the language Bodo in date format MM/DD/YYYY.

Majority of English-language newspapers and media publications in India use MMMM/DD/YYYY.

IS 7900:2001
IndonesiaNoYesNoOn English-written materials, Indonesians tends to use the M-D-Y but was more widely used in non-governmental contexts.
English-language governmental and academic documents use DMY.
Iran, Islamic Republic ofYesYesNoShort format: yyyy/mm/dd[76] in Persian Calendar system ("yy/m/d" is a common alternative). Gregorian dates follow the same rules in Persian literature but tend to be written in the dd/mm/yyyy format in official English documents.[77]

Long format: YYYY MMMM D (Day first, full month name, and year in right-to-left writing direction)[76]

IraqNoYesNoShort format: (dd/mm/yyyy)[78]
IrelandNoYesNo(dd-mm-yyyy). dd/mm/yyyy is also in common use[79][80] IS/EN 28601:1993
Isle of ManNoYesNo
IsraelNoYesNoThe format dd.mm.yyyy using dots is the Hebrew format. dd/mm/yyyy is also in common use.[81][82][83]
ItalyYesYesNo(dd/mm/yyyy)[84]

(yyyy/mm/dd) also sometimes used, especially in computing contexts.

UNI EN 28601
Ivory CoastNoYesNo
JamaicaYesYesNo[85]
Jan MayenNoYesNo
JapanYesNoYesOften in the form yyyymmdd; sometimes Japanese era year is used, e.g. 平成18年12月30日.[86] JIS X 0301:2002
JerseyNoYesNo
JordanNoYesNo[87][88]
KazakhstanNoYesNo(yyyy.dd.mm) in Kazakh and (dd.mm.(yy)yy) in Russian[89]
KenyaYesYesYes(yy/mm/dd)[90]

(dd/mm/yyyy)

(m/d/yyyy) for Swahili[91]

KiribatiNoYesNo
North KoreaYesNoNo
South KoreaYesNoNo National standard format is yyyy-mm-dd (with leading zeroes) and (yy)yy (m)m (d)d (with or without leading zeroes)[92]

casually many people use (yy)yy.(m)m.(d)d(.) (with or without leading zeroes, with or without the last full stop).

KS X ISO 8601
KosovoNoYesNo
KuwaitNoYesNo[93]
Kyrgyz RepublicNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[94]
Lao People's Democratic RepublicNoYesNo[95]
LatviaNoYesNoShort format: dd.mm.yyyy.[96]

Long format: yyyy. gada d. mmmm

LebanonNoYesNo[97]
LesothoYesYesNoyyyy-mm-dd for Sesotho and dd/mm/yyyy for English
LiberiaNoYesNo
LibyaNoYesNo[98]
LiechtensteinNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[99]
LithuaniaYesNoNo(yyyy-mm-dd)[100]

yyyy <m.> <month in genitive> d <d.>

LST ISO 8601:1997 (obsolete) LST ISO 8601:2006 (current)[101]
LuxembourgYesYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[102] ITM-EN 28601
MacauYesYesNoYMD (same as Hong Kong)[103]

DMY (in Portuguese and English)

MadagascarNoYesNo
MalawiNoYesNo
MalaysiaNoYesNo
MaldivesYesYesNoShort format: yy/mm/dd (Day first, month next and year last in right-to-left writing direction)

Long format: dd mmmm yyyy (Year first, full month name and day last in right-to-left writing direction)

MaliNoYesNo
MaltaNoYesNo
Marshall IslandsNoNoYes[104]
MartiniqueNoYesNo
MauritaniaNoYesNo
MauritiusNoYesNo
MayotteNoYesNo
MexicoNoYesNo[105] NOM-008-SCFI-2002
MoldovaNoYesNo
MonacoNoYesNo[106]
MongoliaYesNoNoNational standard format is yyyy-mm-dd (with leading zeroes) and yyyy оны (m)m сарын (d)d (with or without leading zeroes)

Traditional Mongolian languages in Mongolia usually give date examples in the form 2017ᠣᠨ ᠵᠢᠷᠭᠤᠳᠤᠭᠠᠷ ᠰᠠᠷ᠎ᠠ 2ᠡᠳᠦᠷ but this form is never used when writing in Mongolian Cyrillic; casually many people use yyyy/(m)m/(d)d or yyyy.(m)m.(d)d (with or without leading zeroes).[107]

MNS-ISO 8601
MontenegroNoYesNo(d.m.yyyy)[108]
MontserratNoYesNo
MoroccoNoYesNo[109]
MozambiqueNoYesNo
MyanmarYesYesNoYMD for Burmese calendar. DMY for Gregorian calendar.
Nagorno-Karabakh RepublicNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[13][8]
NamibiaYesYesNoDMY[110]
NauruNoYesNo
NepalYesYesNoDMY, YMD in official Nepali Vikram Samvat calendar (also see Nepal Sambat which is also in use); m/d/y is used in newspapers (English language) and PCs[111]
NetherlandsNoYesNoUsing hyphens as in "dd-mm-yyyy".[112] NEN ISO 8601, NEN EN 28601, NEN 2772
New CaledoniaNoYesNo
New ZealandNoYesNo[113]
NicaraguaNoYesNo[114]
NigerNoYesNo
NigeriaNoYesNoShort format: (d)d/(m)m/(yy)yy for Edo, English, Fulani, Hausa, Ibibio, Igbo, Kanuri and Yoruba language[115]
Long format: d mmmm yyyy for English, Hausa and Igbo and mmmm dd, yyyy for Edo, Fulani, Ibibio, Kanuri and Yoruba language
NiueNoYesNo
Norfolk IslandNoYesNo
North MacedoniaNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[116]
Northern Mariana IslandsNoNoYes[117]
NorwayYesYesNodd.mm.yyyy; leading zeroes and century digits may be omitted, e.g., 10.02.16; ddmmyy (six figures, no century digits, no delimiters) allowed in tables. ISO dates yyyy-mm-dd can be used for "technical" purposes. The fraction form d/m-y is incorrect, but is common and considered passable in handwriting. Lule Sami and Southern Sami dates mmmm d. b. yyyy.[118] NS-ISO 8601[119]
OmanNoYesNo[120]
PakistanNoYesNo
Palestine (Palestinian Authority, West Bank and Gaza Strip)NoYesNo(dd/mm/yyyy)
PalauNoYesNo[121]
PanamaNoYesYesShort format: mm/dd/yyyy
Long format: d de mmmm de yyyy[122]
Papua New GuineaNoYesNo
ParaguayNoYesNo[123]
PeruNoYesNo[124]
PhilippinesNoYesYesLong formats:
English: mmmm d, yyyy
DMY dates are also used occasionally, primarily by, but not limited to, government institutions such as on the data page of passports, and immigration and customs forms.
Filipino: ika-d ng mmmm, yyyy[125]
(Note: Month and year can be shortened. Filipino dates may also be written in mmmm d, yyyy format in civil use but still pronounced as above.)

Short/numerical format: mm/dd/yyyy for both languages.
Pitcairn IslandsNoYesNo
PolandYesYesNoTraditional format (DMY): (dd.mm.yyyy,[126] often with dots as separators; more official is d <month in genitive> yyyy, or, less frequently, d <month in Roman numerals> yyyy)[127][128]

Official format (YMD): The ISO 8601 YYYY-MM-DD format is used in official documents, banks, computer systems and the internet in Poland.

PN-90/N-01204
PortugalYesYesNoMostly (dd/mm/yyyy) and (dd-mm-yyyy); some newer documents use (yyyy-mm-dd).[129] NP EN 28601
Puerto RicoNoYesYesEnglish: mmmm d, yyyy
Spanish: d de mmmm de yyyy
QatarNoYesNo[130]
RéunionNoYesNo
RomaniaNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[131][132] Also widely used: (d)d-mmm-yyyy (3 letters of month name with the notable exception of Nov for November, which would otherwise be noiembrie) and (d)d-XII-yyyy (month number as a Roman numeral with lines above AND below, slowly deprecating)
Russian FederationYesYesNo(dd.mm.(yy)yy);[133] more official is d <month in genitive> yyyy г. (= g., short for goda, i.e. year in genitive)

Bashkir, Ossetian, Sakha and Tatar languages in Russia usually give date examples in the form 22 май 2017 й, 22 майы, 2017 аз, ыам ыйын 22 күнэ 2017 с., 22 май 2017 ел but this form is never used when writing in Russian.

ГОСТ ИСО 8601-2001
RwandaYesYesNo(yyyy/mm/dd or yyyy mmmm dd) for Kinyarwanda

(dd/mm/yyyy or d mmmm yyyy) for English and French

SabaNoYesNo
Saint BarthélemyNoYesNo
Saint HelenaNoYesNo
Saint Kitts and NevisNoYesNo
Saint LuciaNoYesNo
Saint MartinNoYesNo
Saint Pierre and MiquelonNoYesNo
Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesNoYesNo
SamoaNoYesNo
San MarinoNoYesNo
São Tomé and PríncipeNoYesNo
Saudi ArabiaNoYesNo(dd/mm/yyyy in Islamic and Gregorian calendar systems,[134][135]
SenegalNoYesNo
SerbiaNoYesNo(d.m.yyyy. or d. mmmm yyyy.)[136][137][138][139]
SeychellesNoYesNo
Sierra LeoneNoYesNo
SingaporeYesYesNo(Chinese representation: yyyymd, no leading zeroes)[140]

DMY in English[141]

MDY (in long format) also sometimes used, especially in media publications, commercial usage, and some governmental websites.

Sint EustatiusNoYesNo
Sint MaartenNoYesNo
SlovakiaNoYesNo(d. m. yyyy)[142]
SloveniaNoYesNo

(d. m. yyyy or d. mmmm yyyy)[143]

Solomon IslandsNoYesNo
SomaliaNoYesNoShort format: dd/mm/yyyy
South AfricaYesYesNo(yyyy-mm-dd or yyyy mmmm d)

(yyyy/mm/dd, yyyy-mm-dd or dd mmmm yyyy)

(m/d/yyyy or mmmm d, yyyy) for Zulu

SpainYesYesNo(dd/mm/yyyy) for Asturian, Catalan, Galician, Spanish and Valencian[144]

(yyyy/mm/dd) for Basque

UNE EN 28601
Sri LankaYesYesNo(yyyy-mm-dd) for Sinhala and (d-m-yyyy) for Tamil

English-language media and commercial publications use Month-day-year in long format, but only Day-month-year format (both long and short numeric) are used in governmental and other English documents of official contexts.

SudanNoYesNo
South SudanNoYesNo
SurinameNoYesNo
SvalbardNoYesNo
SwedenYesYesNoNational standard format is yyyy-mm-dd.[145] dd/mm/yyyy format is used in some places where it is required by EU regulations, for example for best-before dates on food[146] and on driver's licenses. d/m format is used causually, when the year is obvious from the context, and for date ranges, e.g. 28-31/8 for 28-31 August.

The textual format is "d mmmm yyyy" or "den d mmmm yyyy".

SS-ISO 8601
SwitzerlandNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy or d. mmmm yyyy) for French, German, Italian and Romansh[147][148] SN ISO 8601:2005-08
Syrian Arab RepublicNoYesNo[149]
TaiwanYesNoNoAll-numeric dates: yyyy/(m)m/(d)d

Alphanumerical: yyyymd, year might be represented using ROC era system: 民國95年12月30日.[150]

CNS 7648
TajikistanNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[151]
TanzaniaNoYesNo
ThailandNoYesNodd/mm/yyyy (with Buddhist Era years instead of Common Era)[152] TIS 1111:2535 in 1992
TogoNoYesYes(dd/mm/yyyy) in French and (mm/dd/(yy)yy) in Ewe
TokelauNoYesNo
TongaNoYesNo
Trinidad and TobagoNoYesNo[153]
Tristan da CunhaNoYesNo
TunisiaNoYesNo[154]
TurkeyNoYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy)[155][156]
TurkmenistanNoYesNo(dd.mm.(yy)yy ý.), yyyy-nji ýylyň d-nji mmmm[157][158]
Turks and Caicos IslandsNoYesNo
TuvaluNoYesNo
UgandaNoYesNo
UkraineNoYesNo(dd.mm.(yy)yy;[159][160] some cases of dd/mm/yyyy[161])
United Arab EmiratesNoYesNo[162][163]
United KingdomYesYesNoMost style guides follow the DMY convention by recommending d mmmm yyyy (sometimes written dd/mm/yyyy) format in articles (e.g. The Guardian's).[164]

Some newspapers use dddd mmmm d, yyyy for both the banner and articles,[165] while others stick to DMY for both.[166]

In addition, YMD with four-digit year is used increasingly especially in applications associated with computers, and as per British standard BS ISO 8601:2004,[167] avoiding the ambiguity of the numerical versions of the DMY/MDY formats.

BS ISO 8601:2004
United States Minor Outlying IslandsNoNoYes
United States of AmericaYesNoYes(Civilian vernacular: m/d/yy or m/d/yyyy;[168][169] other formats, including d mmm(m) yyyy and yyyy-mm-dd, are common or prescribed—particularly in military, academic, scientific, computing, industrial, or governmental contexts. See Date and time notation in the United States.) ANSI INCITS 30-1997 (R2008) and NIST FIPS PUB 4-2
United States Virgin IslandsNoNoYes[170]
UruguayNoYesNo[171][172]
UzbekistanYesYesNo(dd.mm.yyyy Cyrillic, dd/mm yyyy Latin)[173][174][175]
VanuatuNoYesNo
Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic ofNoYesNo[176][177][178]
VietnamYesYesNoNational current full format: "Ngày [d]d, tháng [m]m, năm yyyy" or ngày [d]d, tháng (month in textform), năm yyyy; short format: [d]d/m[m]/yyyy or [d]d-[m]m-yyyy;

The full format used by Google and Wikipedia's template: "d tháng m, yyyy" In English documents: Short format: yyyy-mm-dd[179] Long format: dd-mmmm-yyyy; In historical documents: era names năm thứ _ tháng [m]m (or in textform) ngày(mồng) [d]d (or in textform).

Wallis and FutunaNoYesNo
YemenNoYesNo[180][181]
ZambiaNoYesNo
ZimbabweNoYesNo[182]

See also

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