Convert dates to Gregorian calendar with our Jewish Calendar to Gregorian Calendar Converter.
Simply enter a Hebrew (Jewish) date — day, month, and year — and get the exact Gregorian date in seconds.
This easy-to-use tool helps you understand Jewish dates used for holidays, birthdays, or historical events and see their equivalent on the modern civil calendar.
Jewish to Gregorian Calendar
How to Convert Jewish Calendar to Gregorian Calendar
The Jewish (Hebrew) calendar is a lunisolar system — it’s based on both the moon’s cycles and the solar year.
Because of this, Jewish dates don’t fall on the same Gregorian dates every year.
To convert accurately, you must consider:
- Leap years (7 times every 19 years in the Jewish calendar)
- Variable month lengths (Cheshvan and Kislev may change)
- The start of each Jewish day at sunset
Our online converter uses these rules to calculate Rosh Hashanah, month lengths, and leap-year adjustments, ensuring you get a precise Gregorian equivalent for any Hebrew date.
About Our Jewish Calendar to Gregorian Calendar Converter
It’s designed with:
- Accurate calculation logic following the traditional Hebrew calendar cycle
- Automatic leap-year detection
- Simple and elegant interface
- Instant, offline conversion in your browser
How to Use the Converter
Follow these simple steps to convert a Jewish (Hebrew) date to a Gregorian date:
- Enter the Hebrew day (e.g., 1–30).
- Select the Hebrew month (e.g., Tishri, Kislev, Adar).
- Type the Hebrew year (e.g., 5785).
- Click Convert.
- Instantly, the Gregorian equivalent will appear below (e.g., 1 Tishri 5785 → October 3, 2024).
The converter automatically adjusts for leap years, Adar I/Adar II, and variable months.
Purpose of the Converter
The main purpose of this tool is to make Jewish to Gregorian date conversion simple and accessible for everyone — without requiring specialized software or complex calculations.
It’s useful for:
- Tracking Jewish holidays and religious events
- Finding your Hebrew birthday
- Planning Bar/Bat Mitzvahs, weddings, and memorials
- Comparing historical Jewish dates to modern timelines
- Educational use in schools and cultural institutions
Whether you’re a student, historian, or just curious, this converter helps bridge two important time systems in daily use today.
FAQs – Jewish to Gregorian Calendar
1. Why doesn’t the Jewish calendar align with the Gregorian calendar every year?
Because it’s based on lunar months (about 29.5 days each), the Jewish year shifts relative to the solar Gregorian year. Leap months are added periodically to keep holidays in the correct season.
2. What is a Hebrew leap year?
A Hebrew leap year has an extra month, Adar I, added before Adar (Adar II), to align the lunar and solar cycles. This happens 7 times every 19 years.
3. Can I convert dates from very old or future years?
Yes, but results before the 5000s or far beyond 6000s may have slight deviations since ancient adjustments varied. The converter is accurate for modern Jewish years (5000–6000).
4. Can I embed this tool on my website?
Absolutely! You can copy and paste it directly into any web page.
Final Thoughts
Converting from the Jewish calendar to the Gregorian calendar doesn’t have to be confusing.
With this simple converter, you can instantly translate Hebrew dates into familiar civil dates, helping you connect cultural, historical, and personal moments across both time systems.