Ha, this reminds me of a very similar practice I used to engage in with a few buddies when we started work. It was always fun to try to figure out how to optimize the PTO to get the “most days per day”.
Nowadays, I find that the best time to take PTO is when I feel like taking PTO. Taking a long weekend when I’m feeling burnt out or disengaged goes much further for me than grinding for the entire first half of th year to get a week off for 4th of July. YMMV.
Depending on your role and environment, certain days are also have more value in my eyes than others. For example, people tend not to push heavy stressful and potentially disaster risk processes on Fridays. They either do these on weird off hours for their target user base at large scales or Mondays in general. Fridays where I’m at tend to be “easier” days people intentionally try to make so for a gentle transition into the weekend.
As such, taking off Fridays tends to get me less ROI while Mondays tends to be nice because while everyone deals with problems from the last week head on, I can roll in on a Tuesday with the benefit of their insights and progress. Then there’s the fact even if I’m off on Friday people I socialize with are likely still working anyways so… it could be any day for myself.
This is key - taking the week between Christmas and New Year's often maximizes PTO days, but everyone does that so that week is quiet, simple, and you can put your head down and get some real work done.
I wish I could do that but I have little kids. But we have generous PTO that expires at the end of the year, so everyone takes off lots of time in December... even by December 1 things are getting quiet.
Most days per day also probably means that you're maximizing the amount you spend on travel and the pain you experience. It's not cheap or pleasant traveling around July 4th.
Exactly! I will throw a day off a few weeks away so that I have something to look forward to. When it actually arrives sometimes I don't even care anymore, but it is a great morale booster in the moment. A few three day weekend can be so much more impactful than having 9 days off instead of 5ish.
Looking at the calendar and seeing the next holiday is 6+ weeks away can really drag you down.
It's important to take off a day when you're feeling burnt out, but for some, I think it's also important to plan ahead a little bit to see the "most days per day" where you, your kids, your partner, etc. will all have off together.
Agreed, in Switzerland this idea of "stretching" is common but I find it stupid. Weather going to be bad? Doesnt matter, I can stretch my total time off 3 days more!!! Total off season to where I am traveling to? Doesnt matter, I get that single extra "bridge" day! Man so cringe.
I don't know, seems much easier that if you dont want to work then don't!
I mean the tool OP posted recommended 2 weeks off at the end of March into April on the easter holiday (because of the friday and monday holiday)... who is honestly doing that?
This topic has always rubbed me the wrong way I think because its way too closely tied to the whole workaday / "work sucks" / ratrace / 9-5 mentality.
One other thing as I continue my rant, related, the whole "plan your holidays for the next year so we can figure out the resource planning, even if you move your holiday!" Ugh so depressing, I always am like "welp next year is planned already and its only November". Nothing spontaneous, nothing interesting.
Anyway, I realize also I am likely in the minority here, HN folks will do anything for a "hack".
>>I mean the tool OP posted recommended 2 weeks off at the end of March into April on the easter holiday (because of the friday and monday holiday)... who is honestly doing that?
Parent (heh) means they have no choice but to plan their holidays during the days off in the school roster. Tools like these are pretty much pointless if you can take a day off from work, but your kid is required to show up in school.
When I had younger children, we would just pull them from school on occasion. This did require a bit coordinating with homework, teachers etc, but they don't have to be in school. On a more serious note, schools are there to serve you, be assertive about your children being yours, they do not belong to the state (at least in the USA).
Yeah, that doesn't work in a lot of countries. I can be assertive all I want, but if I pull my child out of school without permission, I risk getting a call from the local child protection services and/or getting fined.
In the Netherlands (and other countries), you have something called "leerplicht" or obligatory education law, and have to ask the school for permission.
The school is allowed to make an exemption for a maximum of 10 days, above that you need to contact the school attendance officer. This can only be provided if the reason falls under some specific types.
If you want to take your children on a holiday outside the national holidays, you have to provide proof that this only a possibility during term time.
Parents don't always know best. There are countries where the child's right to education is seen as higher than the parent's right to do what they think is right.
I meant to be referring to pulling kids out of school randomly .. nothing to do with speeding. My comment appears to have ended up under the wrong post :)
If I could go on a 4-day week, I think I would choose Wednesday, drop the kids off at school, head to the mountains for a hike or skiing in winter, and pick them back up in the afternoon. Now, that would be the perfect work week :)
When I was in my early 20s I had a few friends who were obsessed with traveling and would do stuff like this to maximize long blocks of time off, then they'd pick where to go because now they have 9 days instead of 4, and decide where to go backed on what time of year they had that longer block.
If your trying to maximize "contiguous days off" and you truly don't care when it is, a tool like this is super helpful.
> 2 weeks off at the end of March into April on the easter holiday (because of the friday and monday holiday)... who is honestly doing that?
It's like peak cross country season?! Still loads of snow, but nice weather. I skied in shorts and a tshirt for days this easter!
You know you don't have to do as the tool says? It just highlights one of many variables you can use when deciding when to take your time off. If you have other needs (as your weather thingy, or spontaneity, or when kids are off school), you are of course free to take that into account.
As soon as you have kids in the age range where school is mandatory you are pretty much confined to the school holiday roster for big trips. This means you pretty much have to get your planning going soon, if you want trips that are both interesting and possible.
Planning ahead is the only way to actually have some freedom. You can rent really nice cottages, get that night train reservation, etc., as long as you plan ahead.
I'd love it if it were possible to have elective days off for kids in school as well, but that's usually only possible for people in certain jobs who can't use the regular school holidays.
I thought it was a bit much too until I learned that there can be benefits from a life management perspective to setup yearly traditions, as well as often being able to get beer value for some things planned out in advance
I typically try to take annual leave and to travel exactly on the opposite dates to what this tool recommends. That's because I care more about avoiding the significant extra expense, traffic, and crowds of travel over public holiday periods, than I do about getting a few extra "free days" of leave. No free lunch!
I love doing vacations that start/end midweek. It’s nice to buffer either end of the trip with short work weeks, midweek travel can be less frantic, and being able to spend weekend days at your vacation destination often lets you do more fun things rather than being there on weekdays
Strange comment. Isn't travel on work days better? People are at work, so plane and train tickets seem to be cheaper on those days because there's less demand.
Yes, I traveled recently and flights were about 20% cheaper if it was Thursday-Monday than if any Friday, Saturday, or Sunday was included. Even given the extra nights of hotel I overall saved money on the trip because I extended it.
same here, flight prices are through the roof on those days.
also on the plus side, lot of colleges takes leave in December. so, workloads on that time are also less. it's like a mini vacation if one WFH during that period.
It's fine as long as you avoid the very specific times people commute at, and/or are heading to a place where there aren't so many 9-5 jobs, like a beach town.
Ummm... driving out of my metro area, in any direction, on a work day: zero traffic! Doing so at the start of a long weekend / during Xmas - New Year: horrendous traffic! Is that not the case for you?
Congrats ! However I feel the claim is lying to me and inconsistant:
« In […], there are 11 public holidays in 2024.
Let's stretch your time off from 25 days to 61 days »
61 actually adds up my time off (25) with adjacent week ends and public holidays (27). The 9 missing are week ends already next to public holliday but without any proposed time off extension. If you’re gonna count the WE next to PU it would be fair to include them in the initial count.
The inconsistency is that I didn’t count one Saturday next to a public Holliday in Sunday, while the +9 I’m referring above are Friday/Monday next to week ends.
I know this does not make your product less useful, but in a psychological perspective it toggle my defence mode instantly [0] in the same way an over promising advertisement as the opposite effect than expected.
This reminds how my dad explained me when I was a kid that I actually never go to school (despite evidence for the opposite :))
He would count the days of, than all the weekend, then all the hours I am an home across the year (so double counting what he subtracted before) etc, ending with zero days left for school.
This was driving me mad when I was walking to school :)
This seems like the start of something handy, but isn't yet useful.
As others have mentioned, which holidays a company offers will vary.
But more than that, given a number of days off and a calendar year, this currently seems to output only 1 result, though of course there are a large number of ties (in terms of consecutive days not worked). The current tool doesn't allow the user to 'edit' or swap between 'equally good' allocations. In my attempt, it produced a very skewed result, using the vast majority of days between November and February, and using zero days in July through October. If it suggests using 4 days to extend a holiday into 9 consecutive days, there's no way to express that you'd rather do that for Labor Day than for Veterans day. If it's extending a 3-day weekend into a 4-day one, you can't indicate that you'd rather do that with Columbus Day than with Presidents Day.
Thanks for your feedback! Indeed the algorithm only gives one result, as it tries to fill all gaps from smallest to biggest in the best way possible to create clusters.
Making it super customisable would be tough, as then it becomes just a personal calendar. Maybe showing the rankings transparently (3 options tied, choose which one wins) could be nice.
Hi Zachd,
I like this, but I'd like to be able to do it for custom date ranges, and add custom constraints.
for example, my company has mandatory shutdown days, I have x additional days leave, and z study days leave that I expected to not use more than 1 study day in the same week and I need to use some of my leave by 30 jun as australia businesses manage the financial year as july to june, not jan to december.
Even a simple weighting might work… “do you prefer your time off to be near major public holidays?” Or “which season do you prefer to travel?” Then with the 4 day weeks accordingly. The results it gave me skipped over a lot of other federal holidays and seemed to focus all time off at years end, when I definitely do not want to travel. Which really it just needs to look for weeks with a single day off to buddy up with.
I think a simple feature that would actually effectively enable what they wanted would be to let the user manually add days which should be included in the PTO
Like maybe make the days clickable and give us a popover button for : it'd like this day to be free - and just tread this day as a holiday from there (while deducting the day from the quota)
- The subtitle telling me I can "stretch [my] time off from 20 days to 42 days" is quite misleading. This tool doesn't magically give me more vacation days.
- Much of the page isn't helpful (in NL there are 6 consecutive months without holidays), would suggest only showing months where "stretching" is possible.
Also, it doesn't "stretch" my time off from 25 to 49 days: 6 are national holidays that fall on a weekday, so I would be off on those anyway. So the calculation is wrong.
I love this! Every year in Sweden around christmas, almost all popular magazines publish articles for how to optimally book your vacation days. We have quite a few bank days between christmas and new years, so certain years you can get like 3 weeks off by booking 6 days or so.
This year it looks like you can achieve the following:
In december, take 23rd and 27th off and you get 9 days consecutive time off between 21st and 29th. Add 30th and 31st, and you'll get 12 days consecutive. Add 2nd and 3rd of January and tada, you have 17 days vacation for the price off 6 PTO days! The website linked in this post doesn't get this quite right, as 24th is technically not a public holiday but the vast portion of companies regard it as such.
The 24th of December is a weekend by law in Sweden (Semesterlag 3 a §)
"Lördag och söndag räknas inte som semesterdagar annat än i fall som avses i 9 § tredje stycket. Med söndag jämställs allmän helgdag samt midsommarafton, julafton och nyårsafton."
Well done! Though it oversells it a bit. Check japan for instance you get 10 holidays a year, and it says you'll be able to stretch it to 51 days. Which is true to some extent. But the actual extra days off due to placing your holidays in the right spots is more like 13 days extra days.
It's interesting all the comments are focused on the functionality and not on how it was built. Can you write some more on the experience? You say it was "a fun challenge." Would you consider using Cursor again? What parts of the site (e.g. UI, backend) did you use Cursor heavily and what parts do you use it minimally?
In the state selector, I typed "N" (for New York) and was surprised to see Arizona. After playing around with it, I realize that typeahead isn't working as usual: it's matching any state that has the letter "n" in it.
This is really more interesting? Don't you have the strong feeling that using the AI "really boosted their workflow"?
When can we start talking about things in themselves again? I know its gotta happen eventually, but its been so long, its getting all so boring these days. Like I woke up one day and half the hackers in the world turned into guys talking about different TV manufacturers at Best Buy.
Really neat idea! However, half of the world has Monday as the first day of the week. A setting to change that would be nice :)
Also there are some holidays missing for Sweden. This is stated in the Swedish Annual Leave Act, which establishes that Midsummer's Eve as well as Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve is to be considered equivalent to a Sunday.
Doesn't work for Sweden anyway, because people will think you're mad if you don't take at least three weeks in July/August, where there are no other public holidays.
Maybe a feature where I'm manually picking some days and it tries to figure out the best way to stretch the remaining nice would be useful.
You can reduce the number of days it places already, though. So if you assume you take 15 days in july just reduce the amount of days by 15. Don't get to visualize them, however, and its choices might overlap with yours, so not a perfect workaround.
I also would like the week to start on a monday, btw. Perhaps it could be tied to the country? When choosing norway, calender could shift to how it's displayed here.
Thanks a lot, now there's a quick feature to toggle off certain holidays, I see most US don't get Veteran's day indeed. It should work now, per state as well
I like to use my vacation days to change my workweek from five days per week to four days a week by using one vacation day every Friday (could also do Monday or Wednesday, each has advantages and disadvantages). This year using this method, I managed to make it so that starting with October I'm only working four days a week.
It could be longer, but my superiors told me that according to law, I have to take one break that's at least 10 vacation days long and after that I can use the days as I wish.
I'd like to add some more constraints, like "I'd like to maximize my time off around christmas", where you can see different alternatives e.g.
using 3 days off, you get 7 consecutive days
using 4 days off, you get 9 consecutive days
Because sprinkling them to maximize the total number of days isn't really interesting in reality, even though it's an interesting programming challenge. The reason is that I want to have at least maybe 4 out of 6 weeks off consecutively in the summer months, even if that's not maximizing the total number of consecutive days off. It's those remaining 5-10 days I'd like to optimize for particular holidays and so on.
You could also imagine assigning weights to the months. E.g. 1 day off in July is the same value as 10 days off in January (Say you live where the sun doesn't rise without saying you live where the sun doesn't rise)
This is really cool! I might use this to help plan some of my 2025 vacations
Some suggestions for useful features:
- Ability to customize the work week. I only work Mon-Thurs, which will greatly affect the optimal solution
- Add arbitrary holidays in case the company gives an extra day off, this would nicely complement the existing feature to turn off some holidays
- Select an arbitrary time frame less than a year long. This would be helpful especially to plan end-of-year vacations
- In addition to or instead of the previous point: input what vacations you already have planned. Obviously I can't always take only the most optimal vacations, but I could potentially make my existing ones more optimal by extending them in some cases
Thanks for sharing it! Really cool idea, I've only done this kind of planning ad-hoc in my head, it never occurred to me to solve it exactly
Interesting idea but I do not see the point: people are able to compute the same results mentally very easily.
By the way, I would suggest adding an option: how many consecutive days off does the company allow.
And which days are absolutely not allowed to be taken.
10 years ago, in my company (based in Japan), taking a day off on the first day of the week (generally Monday unless there's an holiday) was not allowed due to the general meeting kicking off the week. This changed recently in my company but as this meeting is common in many Japanese companies, some companies might still apply this restriction.
Likewise, taking a day off before or after a holiday was not allowed except for some specific days (typically Golden Week end of April/beginning of May, Obon in August, and the end of year/New Year). This changed a few years ago.
December is a great time to take a vacation to somewhere warm if you don't like the winter. I like to travel to the Canary Islands from end of December to January. Last time we had 20-25 degrees. Definitely warm enough for the beach.
Winter doesn't even start until late December, seems like February would be a better time to nope out of the cold weather, after you've gotten tired of the novelty.
Obviously the astronomical winter begins with the solstice in late Dec, but meteorological winter is usually the whole months of Dec, Jan and Feb.
By February it's almost spring, there's hope, light at the end of the tunnel. I agree with GP that Dec/Jan is a great time to get away from northern Europe.
Would love to see a "use X days off between now and the end of the year" feature. Putting in the amount of PTO I've currently got gets shown for the whole year instead of just through EOY
IMO taking off Thanksgiving Friday is a red herring. Everyone takes that day off, so anyone still in isn't expected to do much. I'll be "working" from home that day.
With Agile, I have found that I'm never able to just take a day off here and there. I need to take enough time off that I can meaningfully commit to taking less work in the sprint, otherwise my day off just leads to working nights and weekends to catch up. So it's either take the entire 2-week sprint off, or an entire week and hope I can correctly estimate what half a workload looks like.
Or you can just catch up when you're working? I don't understand what this has to do with agile. Are they going to fire you if you don't finish the sprint's tasks?
Well that sucks. Everywhere I've worked has treated sprints as a short term planning exercise. There's no penalty for not finishing all your sprint tasks; it just means your estimate was off and you probably need to add less work to the next sprint.
I think it’d be really hard not to psychologically anchor.
My experience with agile is either:
* you get stressed out being measured at such a low resolution and sandbag or
* you wind up in a low accountability context because even management knows how messed up scrum is for their use case.
Awesome! That reminds me of my paternity leave which I turned into basically working 3 days per week for a long time with some special considerations around holidays.
There is another layer to holidays optimisation based on stressful days though: eg. I'd rather work on a friday (when tons of people are off anyway, little chance of anyone bothering me with some meetings) than a monday; similarly I'd rather work around Christmas time than any other.
Found you a fun edge case in France: your tool doesn’t know how to faire le pont.
Holidays here often land on a Thursday. It’s generally agreed to not be worth the effort to get back into work mode for just one day, so everybody takes Friday off too. (Thus, “making the bridge)
This doesn’t count against your vacation time. Even schools take the days off. Holidays seem to be scheduled this way intentionally, and sometimes they’ll even have one on a Wednesday.
This is pretty cool. I've organically done something similar for many years (i.e. tried to optimize leave to coincide with public holidays to get those extra long weekends.)
If you think it would be fun, maybe you could expose different algorithm choices for how to allocate the blocks?
Eg, I don't necessarily need to maximize the block lengths, but would like the holidays to be more evenly spread through the year. At the moment, it gives me a huge block around the easter period and another one week block later in the same month. And then, there are no holidays for an entire six months from the end of May to the start of November, despite several public holidays in between! I suggest an alternative algorithm would seek fewer one-week blocks and more long-weekend blocks, with some sort of pressure which penalizes blocks for being too close together?
It'd be nice to have different options to maximise my annual leave. For example, if I have 10 days off + 13 public holidays, the website shows all combinations to maximise the number of days off work.
Nice idea, but I was a little surprised that now, in November, it would give me a default of 20 days for this year. Maybe a checkbox "starting today/tomorrow" would make it a lot more useful. Additional constraints, as I am a spoiled German. Some days are often half off for the whole company, typically December 24 and 31.
And then obviously it might make sense to "lock in" certain clusters, or ignore them, but in contrast what I wrote above, this would be eye candy.
Very useful app, especially for kids holidays. I live in Bavaria, Germany and the holidays are different from other regions. I really like the app and hope you will continue to update it.
Thanks for sharing! The option to toggle holidays on/off should be working. Being able to arbitrarily add a chosen day isn't there, you just need to +1 to your days off count and let the algorithm choose for you.
Something is strange in the math for "Let's stretch your time off from X days to Y days"
I am in the US, and it says I have 11 days off. If I say I get 0 days off, it says: "Let's stretch your time off from 0 days to 18 days". It looks like it's counting the weekends prior to a holiday no matter what as a "bonus" day, which is a strange methodology to me. (I would expect that it would only count days that it performed some action to optimize, otherwise it's just table stakes)
Thanks, the count could indeed be improved. I left it as counting all clusters > 2 days as valid extra time off, so all 3 day weekends made from national holidays would be included. But of course it's over optimistic :)
A much simpler way to do this is to move to a country or join a company where you get a lot of vacation days, and then you don't need to worry about it.
Would be interesting if you can also factor in a school schedule or Jewish holidays as well. There are probably other layers you could add because school schedules in the US and England are very different. After having kids and observing the challenges with another family through a nanny share in the pandemic, I need to apply these constraints, and it takes a few go arounds to get right.
A guy I used to work with had a spreadsheet that accounted for how quickly he accumulated PTO (something like ~7.5 hours per 2 week pay period) and would not only forcast when to take vacations but how much PTO he could use and still earn enough before the next one.
I could see you incorporating something like that in your site.
Another idea, would be to consider the protected 'wellbeing or sick' days that some states like Illinois have.
My employer sets aside a few extra holidays to bridge holidays to the weekend. For example this year July 4th was on Thursday so they gave the Friday off too. They also give Winter holidays from 24th to the 1st so its aligned right, a few more vacation days and it adds up to two weeks. And usually the day before long holidays teams tend to work half day so sometimes you don't even need to take a day off.
Nice idea, but it seems that for some countries the longest possible time off has a big overlap with school holidays, which makes sense. However travelling during school breaks is more expensive, it would be nice to find a way to optimize time off while trying to avoid school holidays.
Folks under brazilian law , employed as "CLT", have 30 days PTO, but it must be divided into up to three periods, one of them has to be at least 14 consecutive days, and the other two at least 5 days each.
Sure would be nice to stretch 30 days to 61 as the app suggests...
It would be great to set limits on how much leave is scheduled at once or per quarter. My company says you should ask a manager if you book more than 25% of leave per quarter, so it would be good to know the max I can book without having to ask for permission.
LOL, this works well. I used to do exactly this manually every year to maximize free time blocks for pursuing pet projects.
Bravo. Great use of GPT.
Could you also add factoring in sick days per year (mon/fri)?
If you add the ability to toggle days in various states this could be a really useful tool for me. Unfortunately I have family obligations that occur at various times in the year. Clickable cells that would change them from day/off or not could really help here.
Looks like it doesn't handle year transitions nicely?
In NSW Australia, it shows 11 days between Dec 21 and Dec 31, but Jan 1 is a public holiday here and you capsule add Jan2&3 plus the following weekend to get 16 days 21 Dec 2024 through 5 Jan 2025.
Thanks! I made options to change the year and leave balance, but not to change the first day of the year. Let me know if it still works if you enter the right number of days
Very cool site! I think it could be a nice idea to add a 'shuffle' option, if the suggested days don't suit you. Also to be able to select what days you work, as not everyone works mon - fri (;
Some regional feedback coming from Sweden - your source data set is not 100% in line with what most workers in Sweden will get. For example, 24 December, 31 December and Midsummer's Eve are not reflected as days off in this calendar.
I have a similar home-cooked tool at https://semestra.limbe.ro but ended up using Nager.Date instead, and it has better coverage for Sweden at least: https://date.nager.at/Api I liked the online-first approach since it means you get new or moved holidays without a package bump. The downside is of course if you want an offline-first approach.
As others have said, I would love to see more variations to show “options” on ties, and also have more customization around holidays. Not just show/hide but adding and removing custom dates would be great!
It would be lovely to have key ChatGPT prompts available, e.g. in the git history, i.e. how did you get from here to there? and in contrast, what did you do manually?
This is awesome. For the next iteration, can you make a new list for extra days that need to be off for things like, oh, kids are out of school for teacher planning day?
I think it could be useful to show and take into account January 2025 as well. I'm planning my Christmas holidays including several days off in the beginning of Jan.
I don't precisely know - that's the beauty of it! More than I used to take when I had to cautiously ration each precious day out from a limited supply, each time asking "is this really important enough to spend a PTO day on, and will I be leaving enough days in reserve in case something more important comes up later?" Now I just go when I feel like going, and there's no stress about it.
That's pretty cool. Unfortunately school holidays mean I can't take time off whenever, but I can definitely use the idea to plan time off around those.
I have a planned trip to work around. I want to make sure those are booked, and allocate the rest optimally. I suppose this is the same problem as having extra days to allocate.
The line that says "let's stretch your time off from X days to Y days" is actually misleading, because algorithm optimises for longer consecutive vacations, not for larger amount of vacation days.
Following your strategy the Y will be 3 for any PTO day taken, with public holidays total would easily hit 60+ days.
Thanks so much! ChatGPT and I just added a quick feature to hide certain holidays from a particular year, stored in LocalStorage. Let me know if it works like you expect :)
a good idea but if you count holidays without week-end, and then there is a bank holiday on a friday or a monday, you shouldn't add those 3 days to the total stretched off
Ha, this reminds me of a very similar practice I used to engage in with a few buddies when we started work. It was always fun to try to figure out how to optimize the PTO to get the “most days per day”.
Nowadays, I find that the best time to take PTO is when I feel like taking PTO. Taking a long weekend when I’m feeling burnt out or disengaged goes much further for me than grinding for the entire first half of th year to get a week off for 4th of July. YMMV.
Depending on your role and environment, certain days are also have more value in my eyes than others. For example, people tend not to push heavy stressful and potentially disaster risk processes on Fridays. They either do these on weird off hours for their target user base at large scales or Mondays in general. Fridays where I’m at tend to be “easier” days people intentionally try to make so for a gentle transition into the weekend.
As such, taking off Fridays tends to get me less ROI while Mondays tends to be nice because while everyone deals with problems from the last week head on, I can roll in on a Tuesday with the benefit of their insights and progress. Then there’s the fact even if I’m off on Friday people I socialize with are likely still working anyways so… it could be any day for myself.
This is key - taking the week between Christmas and New Year's often maximizes PTO days, but everyone does that so that week is quiet, simple, and you can put your head down and get some real work done.
I wish I could do that but I have little kids. But we have generous PTO that expires at the end of the year, so everyone takes off lots of time in December... even by December 1 things are getting quiet.
Most days per day also probably means that you're maximizing the amount you spend on travel and the pain you experience. It's not cheap or pleasant traveling around July 4th.
Exactly! I will throw a day off a few weeks away so that I have something to look forward to. When it actually arrives sometimes I don't even care anymore, but it is a great morale booster in the moment. A few three day weekend can be so much more impactful than having 9 days off instead of 5ish.
Looking at the calendar and seeing the next holiday is 6+ weeks away can really drag you down.
It's important to take off a day when you're feeling burnt out, but for some, I think it's also important to plan ahead a little bit to see the "most days per day" where you, your kids, your partner, etc. will all have off together.
Agreed, in Switzerland this idea of "stretching" is common but I find it stupid. Weather going to be bad? Doesnt matter, I can stretch my total time off 3 days more!!! Total off season to where I am traveling to? Doesnt matter, I get that single extra "bridge" day! Man so cringe.
I don't know, seems much easier that if you dont want to work then don't!
I mean the tool OP posted recommended 2 weeks off at the end of March into April on the easter holiday (because of the friday and monday holiday)... who is honestly doing that?
This topic has always rubbed me the wrong way I think because its way too closely tied to the whole workaday / "work sucks" / ratrace / 9-5 mentality.
One other thing as I continue my rant, related, the whole "plan your holidays for the next year so we can figure out the resource planning, even if you move your holiday!" Ugh so depressing, I always am like "welp next year is planned already and its only November". Nothing spontaneous, nothing interesting.
Anyway, I realize also I am likely in the minority here, HN folks will do anything for a "hack".
>>I mean the tool OP posted recommended 2 weeks off at the end of March into April on the easter holiday (because of the friday and monday holiday)... who is honestly doing that?
sad parents tied to school holidays noises.
Sorry, I don't understand - why wouldn't you do that?
Parent (heh) means they have no choice but to plan their holidays during the days off in the school roster. Tools like these are pretty much pointless if you can take a day off from work, but your kid is required to show up in school.
When I had younger children, we would just pull them from school on occasion. This did require a bit coordinating with homework, teachers etc, but they don't have to be in school. On a more serious note, schools are there to serve you, be assertive about your children being yours, they do not belong to the state (at least in the USA).
Yeah, that doesn't work in a lot of countries. I can be assertive all I want, but if I pull my child out of school without permission, I risk getting a call from the local child protection services and/or getting fined.
_Whose_ permission is needed? You're their parent , that's all the "permissions" needed.
In the Netherlands (and other countries), you have something called "leerplicht" or obligatory education law, and have to ask the school for permission.
The school is allowed to make an exemption for a maximum of 10 days, above that you need to contact the school attendance officer. This can only be provided if the reason falls under some specific types.
If you want to take your children on a holiday outside the national holidays, you have to provide proof that this only a possibility during term time.
You can read more about this at https://www.government.nl/topics/compulsory-school-attendanc...
It's the same in Germany, plus home schooling is not permitted (except in some very specific circumstances).
I live in a country that has laws that protect the children, this includes making sure they get an education.
So now you are not free to do whatever you wish or force schools to teach the way you would like to.
And this is great.
And I also pulled my kids from school once or twice to get a better price on skiing but I am ashamed of myself.
School isn't optional in a lot of European countries. Parents don't get to decide that their kids don't need to attend.
Parents don't always know best. There are countries where the child's right to education is seen as higher than the parent's right to do what they think is right.
If kids are performing academically there isn’t much grounds for the school to stand on.
If I am driving 200 km/h but did not have an accident there isn't much grounds for police to fine me.
Law is not optional.
I meant to be referring to pulling kids out of school randomly .. nothing to do with speeding. My comment appears to have ended up under the wrong post :)
You're not from around here, are you :-)
> if you can take a day off from work, but your kid is required to show up in school.
Sounds like a real day off, though. ;)
If I could go on a 4-day week, I think I would choose Wednesday, drop the kids off at school, head to the mountains for a hike or skiing in winter, and pick them back up in the afternoon. Now, that would be the perfect work week :)
This sounds like a feature request / opportunity.
Like, can the tool be expanded to do:
1) Finding vacation time for a group of people (family? college friends?)
2) Can you include black-out days (school days for kids, whatever your specific job requires, etc)
I mean, as long as _I'm_ not responsible for making this thing I can make feature suggestions all day :)
When I was in my early 20s I had a few friends who were obsessed with traveling and would do stuff like this to maximize long blocks of time off, then they'd pick where to go because now they have 9 days instead of 4, and decide where to go backed on what time of year they had that longer block.
If your trying to maximize "contiguous days off" and you truly don't care when it is, a tool like this is super helpful.
This is a great way to plan a travel window and even pick the best destination that presents itself then.
> 2 weeks off at the end of March into April on the easter holiday (because of the friday and monday holiday)... who is honestly doing that?
It's like peak cross country season?! Still loads of snow, but nice weather. I skied in shorts and a tshirt for days this easter!
You know you don't have to do as the tool says? It just highlights one of many variables you can use when deciding when to take your time off. If you have other needs (as your weather thingy, or spontaneity, or when kids are off school), you are of course free to take that into account.
> plan your holidays for the next year
i am absolutely lost in why anyone would do that. And on other side, resource planning is only lame excuse.
But AFAIK most of western europe goes that way.. which is a preliminary planned existance. Boring like hell. Where is Life?
As soon as you have kids in the age range where school is mandatory you are pretty much confined to the school holiday roster for big trips. This means you pretty much have to get your planning going soon, if you want trips that are both interesting and possible.
Planning ahead is the only way to actually have some freedom. You can rent really nice cottages, get that night train reservation, etc., as long as you plan ahead.
I'd love it if it were possible to have elective days off for kids in school as well, but that's usually only possible for people in certain jobs who can't use the regular school holidays.
I thought it was a bit much too until I learned that there can be benefits from a life management perspective to setup yearly traditions, as well as often being able to get beer value for some things planned out in advance
I typically try to take annual leave and to travel exactly on the opposite dates to what this tool recommends. That's because I care more about avoiding the significant extra expense, traffic, and crowds of travel over public holiday periods, than I do about getting a few extra "free days" of leave. No free lunch!
I take time off in the winter because it’s a dreadful time to be in Berlin, while the summers are sacred and shouldn’t be spent anywhere else.
Good luck traveling on work days!
I love doing vacations that start/end midweek. It’s nice to buffer either end of the trip with short work weeks, midweek travel can be less frantic, and being able to spend weekend days at your vacation destination often lets you do more fun things rather than being there on weekdays
Strange comment. Isn't travel on work days better? People are at work, so plane and train tickets seem to be cheaper on those days because there's less demand.
Yes, I traveled recently and flights were about 20% cheaper if it was Thursday-Monday than if any Friday, Saturday, or Sunday was included. Even given the extra nights of hotel I overall saved money on the trip because I extended it.
This is a real worry? Don't you just not go to meetings but otherwise solemnly swear that you're working on the plane?
Works great with an evening flight, you can work all day and leave for the airport after work.
Surprised this passive agressive comment is not further downvoted. Doesn't add to the conversation.
Anyway, OP has a point. I hate traveling on the same day everyone else plans to due to some holiday gap / bridge / whatever.
same here, flight prices are through the roof on those days.
also on the plus side, lot of colleges takes leave in December. so, workloads on that time are also less. it's like a mini vacation if one WFH during that period.
GRINDSET 24/7/365 - every day is a work day but it is never rush-hour.
It's fine as long as you avoid the very specific times people commute at, and/or are heading to a place where there aren't so many 9-5 jobs, like a beach town.
Depending on the city it can be just fine, if not quieter to travel on a weekday.
Ummm... driving out of my metro area, in any direction, on a work day: zero traffic! Doing so at the start of a long weekend / during Xmas - New Year: horrendous traffic! Is that not the case for you?
Congrats ! However I feel the claim is lying to me and inconsistant:
« In […], there are 11 public holidays in 2024.
Let's stretch your time off from 25 days to 61 days »
61 actually adds up my time off (25) with adjacent week ends and public holidays (27). The 9 missing are week ends already next to public holliday but without any proposed time off extension. If you’re gonna count the WE next to PU it would be fair to include them in the initial count.
The inconsistency is that I didn’t count one Saturday next to a public Holliday in Sunday, while the +9 I’m referring above are Friday/Monday next to week ends.
I know this does not make your product less useful, but in a psychological perspective it toggle my defence mode instantly [0] in the same way an over promising advertisement as the opposite effect than expected.
0: discussion ongoing here https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42113449
This reminds how my dad explained me when I was a kid that I actually never go to school (despite evidence for the opposite :))
He would count the days of, than all the weekend, then all the hours I am an home across the year (so double counting what he subtracted before) etc, ending with zero days left for school.
This was driving me mad when I was walking to school :)
I didn't like this either, seems kind of slimy.
This seems like the start of something handy, but isn't yet useful. As others have mentioned, which holidays a company offers will vary. But more than that, given a number of days off and a calendar year, this currently seems to output only 1 result, though of course there are a large number of ties (in terms of consecutive days not worked). The current tool doesn't allow the user to 'edit' or swap between 'equally good' allocations. In my attempt, it produced a very skewed result, using the vast majority of days between November and February, and using zero days in July through October. If it suggests using 4 days to extend a holiday into 9 consecutive days, there's no way to express that you'd rather do that for Labor Day than for Veterans day. If it's extending a 3-day weekend into a 4-day one, you can't indicate that you'd rather do that with Columbus Day than with Presidents Day.
Thanks for your feedback! Indeed the algorithm only gives one result, as it tries to fill all gaps from smallest to biggest in the best way possible to create clusters.
Making it super customisable would be tough, as then it becomes just a personal calendar. Maybe showing the rankings transparently (3 options tied, choose which one wins) could be nice.
Hi Zachd, I like this, but I'd like to be able to do it for custom date ranges, and add custom constraints.
for example, my company has mandatory shutdown days, I have x additional days leave, and z study days leave that I expected to not use more than 1 study day in the same week and I need to use some of my leave by 30 jun as australia businesses manage the financial year as july to june, not jan to december.
Even a simple weighting might work… “do you prefer your time off to be near major public holidays?” Or “which season do you prefer to travel?” Then with the 4 day weeks accordingly. The results it gave me skipped over a lot of other federal holidays and seemed to focus all time off at years end, when I definitely do not want to travel. Which really it just needs to look for weeks with a single day off to buddy up with.
I think a simple feature that would actually effectively enable what they wanted would be to let the user manually add days which should be included in the PTO
Like maybe make the days clickable and give us a popover button for : it'd like this day to be free - and just tread this day as a holiday from there (while deducting the day from the quota)
Awesome site! One nitpick: Could you please just use `Taiwan` instead of `Taiwan, Province of China`. Thanks!
Hey, that's an impressive site for being built using a code assistant.
I was wondering where you got the list of countries from or whether you're using a library for the dropdown?
(Curious because visiting the site from Taiwan it lists it as "Taiwan, Province of China")
Hi, thanks for your feedback! The list of countries comes from a popular ISO-3166-1 npm package.
I can see there was already much discussion about this topic over on their repo https://github.com/michaelwittig/node-i18n-iso-countries/iss...
Nice tool! Some feedback:
- The subtitle telling me I can "stretch [my] time off from 20 days to 42 days" is quite misleading. This tool doesn't magically give me more vacation days.
- Much of the page isn't helpful (in NL there are 6 consecutive months without holidays), would suggest only showing months where "stretching" is possible.
Also, it doesn't "stretch" my time off from 25 to 49 days: 6 are national holidays that fall on a weekday, so I would be off on those anyway. So the calculation is wrong.
I love this! Every year in Sweden around christmas, almost all popular magazines publish articles for how to optimally book your vacation days. We have quite a few bank days between christmas and new years, so certain years you can get like 3 weeks off by booking 6 days or so.
This year it looks like you can achieve the following: In december, take 23rd and 27th off and you get 9 days consecutive time off between 21st and 29th. Add 30th and 31st, and you'll get 12 days consecutive. Add 2nd and 3rd of January and tada, you have 17 days vacation for the price off 6 PTO days! The website linked in this post doesn't get this quite right, as 24th is technically not a public holiday but the vast portion of companies regard it as such.
The 24th of December is a weekend by law in Sweden (Semesterlag 3 a §)
"Lördag och söndag räknas inte som semesterdagar annat än i fall som avses i 9 § tredje stycket. Med söndag jämställs allmän helgdag samt midsommarafton, julafton och nyårsafton."
Most companies don't take all public holidays; this ends up being primarily for Federal workers who do get each of those holidays.
If you make a table of holidays and then check on/off those applicable, then have the algorithm fill back in as needed, that would be helpful.
Thanks for the feedback! ChatGPT and I made the change to hide individual holidays for a country per year, click "edit list" :)
Well done! Though it oversells it a bit. Check japan for instance you get 10 holidays a year, and it says you'll be able to stretch it to 51 days. Which is true to some extent. But the actual extra days off due to placing your holidays in the right spots is more like 13 days extra days.
So would be better to calculate it like that.
It's interesting all the comments are focused on the functionality and not on how it was built. Can you write some more on the experience? You say it was "a fun challenge." Would you consider using Cursor again? What parts of the site (e.g. UI, backend) did you use Cursor heavily and what parts do you use it minimally?
In the state selector, I typed "N" (for New York) and was surprised to see Arizona. After playing around with it, I realize that typeahead isn't working as usual: it's matching any state that has the letter "n" in it.
This is really more interesting? Don't you have the strong feeling that using the AI "really boosted their workflow"?
When can we start talking about things in themselves again? I know its gotta happen eventually, but its been so long, its getting all so boring these days. Like I woke up one day and half the hackers in the world turned into guys talking about different TV manufacturers at Best Buy.
Really neat idea! However, half of the world has Monday as the first day of the week. A setting to change that would be nice :)
Also there are some holidays missing for Sweden. This is stated in the Swedish Annual Leave Act, which establishes that Midsummer's Eve as well as Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve is to be considered equivalent to a Sunday.
https://www.government.se/contentassets/eaf3467d4f484c9fb727...
Doesn't work for Sweden anyway, because people will think you're mad if you don't take at least three weeks in July/August, where there are no other public holidays.
Maybe a feature where I'm manually picking some days and it tries to figure out the best way to stretch the remaining nice would be useful.
You can reduce the number of days it places already, though. So if you assume you take 15 days in july just reduce the amount of days by 15. Don't get to visualize them, however, and its choices might overlap with yours, so not a perfect workaround.
I also would like the week to start on a monday, btw. Perhaps it could be tied to the country? When choosing norway, calender could shift to how it's displayed here.
Hi, thanks for your feedback. GPT was able to make your change for Monday vs Sunday week starting :)
This is a great idea for something I typically do manually to plan around maximizing vacation time around when my kids have off.
Would recommend being able to adjust the public holidays - for example: Juneteenth and Veterans day off were not days off of school+work.
Other future improvements would be some kind of tie in for airfare - these are typically some of the most expensive times to fly.
Love the idea
Also it would be great to be able to add "corporate" holidays, where the whole company is off because of X reason.
Thanks! Adding customisable fixed holiday days could be a nice idea :)
I think it could be as simple as clicking a date will cycle it from default, mandatory off, mandatory non-off (must be working).
I second that request!
Thanks a lot, now there's a quick feature to toggle off certain holidays, I see most US don't get Veteran's day indeed. It should work now, per state as well
I like to use my vacation days to change my workweek from five days per week to four days a week by using one vacation day every Friday (could also do Monday or Wednesday, each has advantages and disadvantages). This year using this method, I managed to make it so that starting with October I'm only working four days a week.
It could be longer, but my superiors told me that according to law, I have to take one break that's at least 10 vacation days long and after that I can use the days as I wish.
I'd like to add some more constraints, like "I'd like to maximize my time off around christmas", where you can see different alternatives e.g.
using 3 days off, you get 7 consecutive days using 4 days off, you get 9 consecutive days
Because sprinkling them to maximize the total number of days isn't really interesting in reality, even though it's an interesting programming challenge. The reason is that I want to have at least maybe 4 out of 6 weeks off consecutively in the summer months, even if that's not maximizing the total number of consecutive days off. It's those remaining 5-10 days I'd like to optimize for particular holidays and so on.
You could also imagine assigning weights to the months. E.g. 1 day off in July is the same value as 10 days off in January (Say you live where the sun doesn't rise without saying you live where the sun doesn't rise)
+1
Also I think there should be per-day manual overrides for force on/off
This is really cool! I might use this to help plan some of my 2025 vacations
Some suggestions for useful features:
- Ability to customize the work week. I only work Mon-Thurs, which will greatly affect the optimal solution
- Add arbitrary holidays in case the company gives an extra day off, this would nicely complement the existing feature to turn off some holidays
- Select an arbitrary time frame less than a year long. This would be helpful especially to plan end-of-year vacations
- In addition to or instead of the previous point: input what vacations you already have planned. Obviously I can't always take only the most optimal vacations, but I could potentially make my existing ones more optimal by extending them in some cases
Thanks for sharing it! Really cool idea, I've only done this kind of planning ad-hoc in my head, it never occurred to me to solve it exactly
Interesting idea but I do not see the point: people are able to compute the same results mentally very easily.
By the way, I would suggest adding an option: how many consecutive days off does the company allow. And which days are absolutely not allowed to be taken.
10 years ago, in my company (based in Japan), taking a day off on the first day of the week (generally Monday unless there's an holiday) was not allowed due to the general meeting kicking off the week. This changed recently in my company but as this meeting is common in many Japanese companies, some companies might still apply this restriction.
Likewise, taking a day off before or after a holiday was not allowed except for some specific days (typically Golden Week end of April/beginning of May, Obon in August, and the end of year/New Year). This changed a few years ago.
Fun experiment but in reality people take vacation in the summer due to the season and schools, not because there are more public holidays then.
This tool just told me to take all of December off, great time to sit somewhere in the cold.
December is a great time to take a vacation to somewhere warm if you don't like the winter. I like to travel to the Canary Islands from end of December to January. Last time we had 20-25 degrees. Definitely warm enough for the beach.
Even if it was cooler, say 15 degrees, going somewhere with more daylight hours is really great at that time of year.
On 1st January, London gets 8 hours of daylight, Edinburgh 7 hours, Stockholm 6 hours. Tenerife has nearly 11!
Winter doesn't even start until late December, seems like February would be a better time to nope out of the cold weather, after you've gotten tired of the novelty.
Obviously the astronomical winter begins with the solstice in late Dec, but meteorological winter is usually the whole months of Dec, Jan and Feb.
By February it's almost spring, there's hope, light at the end of the tunnel. I agree with GP that Dec/Jan is a great time to get away from northern Europe.
Different people have different preferences and life circumstances.
Same here. While it's great to have long holidays, it doesn't sound fun at all to have no days off between June and November.
See, for me it prefers I take nearly the whole month of May off once I go over 15 days of vacation. I think it's very much going for local maxima.
Would love to see a "use X days off between now and the end of the year" feature. Putting in the amount of PTO I've currently got gets shown for the whole year instead of just through EOY
IMO taking off Thanksgiving Friday is a red herring. Everyone takes that day off, so anyone still in isn't expected to do much. I'll be "working" from home that day.
With Agile, I have found that I'm never able to just take a day off here and there. I need to take enough time off that I can meaningfully commit to taking less work in the sprint, otherwise my day off just leads to working nights and weekends to catch up. So it's either take the entire 2-week sprint off, or an entire week and hope I can correctly estimate what half a workload looks like.
Yes, yes, doing Agile wrong etc
Or you can just catch up when you're working? I don't understand what this has to do with agile. Are they going to fire you if you don't finish the sprint's tasks?
Eventually, yes?
Everywhere I’ve ever worked has treated sprints as an endless series of 2 week deadlines.
(Yes, I understand this is not “real” agile. I’ve never seen “real” agile and don’t personally know anyone who has.)
Well that sucks. Everywhere I've worked has treated sprints as a short term planning exercise. There's no penalty for not finishing all your sprint tasks; it just means your estimate was off and you probably need to add less work to the next sprint.
I think it’d be really hard not to psychologically anchor.
My experience with agile is either: * you get stressed out being measured at such a low resolution and sandbag or * you wind up in a low accountability context because even management knows how messed up scrum is for their use case.
I wish we had something better.
Awesome! That reminds me of my paternity leave which I turned into basically working 3 days per week for a long time with some special considerations around holidays.
There is another layer to holidays optimisation based on stressful days though: eg. I'd rather work on a friday (when tons of people are off anyway, little chance of anyone bothering me with some meetings) than a monday; similarly I'd rather work around Christmas time than any other.
Found you a fun edge case in France: your tool doesn’t know how to faire le pont.
Holidays here often land on a Thursday. It’s generally agreed to not be worth the effort to get back into work mode for just one day, so everybody takes Friday off too. (Thus, “making the bridge)
This doesn’t count against your vacation time. Even schools take the days off. Holidays seem to be scheduled this way intentionally, and sometimes they’ll even have one on a Wednesday.
That's wrong, the pont isn't free. Your employer uses one of your RTTs.
Fun tool! I'd love for the "Edit List" menu to allow me to add company holidays to factor those into the maximization
This is pretty cool. I've organically done something similar for many years (i.e. tried to optimize leave to coincide with public holidays to get those extra long weekends.)
If you think it would be fun, maybe you could expose different algorithm choices for how to allocate the blocks?
Eg, I don't necessarily need to maximize the block lengths, but would like the holidays to be more evenly spread through the year. At the moment, it gives me a huge block around the easter period and another one week block later in the same month. And then, there are no holidays for an entire six months from the end of May to the start of November, despite several public holidays in between! I suggest an alternative algorithm would seek fewer one-week blocks and more long-weekend blocks, with some sort of pressure which penalizes blocks for being too close together?
Nice work! I once launched stretchyourannualleave[dot]com on PH https://www.producthunt.com/products/stretch-your-annual-lea... and also here https://hn.algolia.com/?q=stretchyourannualleave
It'd be nice to have different options to maximise my annual leave. For example, if I have 10 days off + 13 public holidays, the website shows all combinations to maximise the number of days off work.
Nice idea, but I was a little surprised that now, in November, it would give me a default of 20 days for this year. Maybe a checkbox "starting today/tomorrow" would make it a lot more useful. Additional constraints, as I am a spoiled German. Some days are often half off for the whole company, typically December 24 and 31.
And then obviously it might make sense to "lock in" certain clusters, or ignore them, but in contrast what I wrote above, this would be eye candy.
Very useful app, especially for kids holidays. I live in Bavaria, Germany and the holidays are different from other regions. I really like the app and hope you will continue to update it.
Like others have mentioned, being able to toggle which days are holidays would make this useful.
I get (8) holidays each year: New Year’s Day, Memorial Day, July 4th, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Black Friday, Christmas Eve, and Christmas Day.
Two of my company holidays aren’t federal holidays, so being able to toggle arbitrary weekdays as holidays would also be useful.
Also, sometimes holidays fall on the weekend and the observed holiday date is arbitrarily chosen.
Your algorithm did pick the same vacation days as I did this year for December, so it does seem to be working properly in that sense :)
Thanks for sharing! The option to toggle holidays on/off should be working. Being able to arbitrarily add a chosen day isn't there, you just need to +1 to your days off count and let the algorithm choose for you.
Something is strange in the math for "Let's stretch your time off from X days to Y days"
I am in the US, and it says I have 11 days off. If I say I get 0 days off, it says: "Let's stretch your time off from 0 days to 18 days". It looks like it's counting the weekends prior to a holiday no matter what as a "bonus" day, which is a strange methodology to me. (I would expect that it would only count days that it performed some action to optimize, otherwise it's just table stakes)
The tool is great, I would definitely use it couple of times a year to see the "pattern" :) The design is great!
Adding to the comment on "calculations". Perhaps the wording could be improved, now it feels a bit like a dark pattern in sales.
This is not the best version, but explains what I mean:
"Let's turn your X days of time off into Y days of holidays."
Thanks, the count could indeed be improved. I left it as counting all clusters > 2 days as valid extra time off, so all 3 day weekends made from national holidays would be included. But of course it's over optimistic :)
I would almost rather know how many 'blocks'I got off. Like, tell me how many 1 week chunks I get, how many 2 week chunks I get, etc.
A much simpler way to do this is to move to a country or join a company where you get a lot of vacation days, and then you don't need to worry about it.
Would be interesting if you can also factor in a school schedule or Jewish holidays as well. There are probably other layers you could add because school schedules in the US and England are very different. After having kids and observing the challenges with another family through a nanny share in the pandemic, I need to apply these constraints, and it takes a few go arounds to get right.
A guy I used to work with had a spreadsheet that accounted for how quickly he accumulated PTO (something like ~7.5 hours per 2 week pay period) and would not only forcast when to take vacations but how much PTO he could use and still earn enough before the next one.
I could see you incorporating something like that in your site.
Another idea, would be to consider the protected 'wellbeing or sick' days that some states like Illinois have.
My employer sets aside a few extra holidays to bridge holidays to the weekend. For example this year July 4th was on Thursday so they gave the Friday off too. They also give Winter holidays from 24th to the 1st so its aligned right, a few more vacation days and it adds up to two weeks. And usually the day before long holidays teams tend to work half day so sometimes you don't even need to take a day off.
It's very nice. I'd like the feature to set some "fixed time off" (e.g. school is closed) and substract them from my days of.
Feature request: Enter company shut down dates.
Nice idea, but it seems that for some countries the longest possible time off has a big overlap with school holidays, which makes sense. However travelling during school breaks is more expensive, it would be nice to find a way to optimize time off while trying to avoid school holidays.
You should add the ability to change the public holidays. My company doesn't give veteran's day
Folks under brazilian law , employed as "CLT", have 30 days PTO, but it must be divided into up to three periods, one of them has to be at least 14 consecutive days, and the other two at least 5 days each.
Sure would be nice to stretch 30 days to 61 as the app suggests...
It should span over the New Year:
Dec 21 to Dec 31: 11 days is actually Dec 21 to Jan 1: 12 days and still only 5 vacation days.
Very nice. All the holidays look correct.
Covers most of the tricks people here (New Zealand) use to stretch out their Holiday lengths.
It looks like the day of the week is off by one. Jan 1 2025 is a Wednesday, labeled Tuesday. Fridays is labeled as the weekend, for all weeks.
Other than that, this looks cool. Wish you could turn off public holidays though, some of us don't get those.
The ability to exclude or include public holidays where as a federal employee or not (self employed) would be useful too
It would be great to set limits on how much leave is scheduled at once or per quarter. My company says you should ask a manager if you book more than 25% of leave per quarter, so it would be good to know the max I can book without having to ask for permission.
LOL, this works well. I used to do exactly this manually every year to maximize free time blocks for pursuing pet projects. Bravo. Great use of GPT. Could you also add factoring in sick days per year (mon/fri)?
If you add the ability to toggle days in various states this could be a really useful tool for me. Unfortunately I have family obligations that occur at various times in the year. Clickable cells that would change them from day/off or not could really help here.
Thanks! ChatGPT and I made the change for per-state support and to hide individual holidays each year :)
Looks like it doesn't handle year transitions nicely?
In NSW Australia, it shows 11 days between Dec 21 and Dec 31, but Jan 1 is a public holiday here and you capsule add Jan2&3 plus the following weekend to get 16 days 21 Dec 2024 through 5 Jan 2025.
Awesome idea, some suggestions (to fit my use case)
My annual leave resets on April 1st, so being able to change the year would be handy.
I worked compressed hours (I have every Friday off)
I can carry over 5 unused days to the next year, and buy 5 more days. This might impact what days I take off.
Thanks! I made options to change the year and leave balance, but not to change the first day of the year. Let me know if it still works if you enter the right number of days
In Tokyo, Japan where I work, I get a generous number of days off. I was surprised just how long this could be stretched.
- Tokyo 30 days to 83 days.
- Hong Kong 30 days to 77 days.
- California 30 days to 76 days.
- France 30 days to 70 days.
This is a cool idea. A couple suggestions:
- A lot of companies shut down for the period between Christmas and New Years. That should be a check box.
- There should be user preference for vacation during warm or cold weather seasons.
Very cool site! I think it could be a nice idea to add a 'shuffle' option, if the suggested days don't suit you. Also to be able to select what days you work, as not everyone works mon - fri (;
Cool project!
Some regional feedback coming from Sweden - your source data set is not 100% in line with what most workers in Sweden will get. For example, 24 December, 31 December and Midsummer's Eve are not reflected as days off in this calendar.
Ah shame, I totally depend on the well maintained npm package date-holidays. But I guess it could use a PR! https://github.com/commenthol/date-holidays/blob/master/data...
I have a similar home-cooked tool at https://semestra.limbe.ro but ended up using Nager.Date instead, and it has better coverage for Sweden at least: https://date.nager.at/Api I liked the online-first approach since it means you get new or moved holidays without a package bump. The downside is of course if you want an offline-first approach.
As others have said, I would love to see more variations to show “options” on ties, and also have more customization around holidays. Not just show/hide but adding and removing custom dates would be great!
:-) thanks for sharing.
It would be lovely to have key ChatGPT prompts available, e.g. in the git history, i.e. how did you get from here to there? and in contrast, what did you do manually?
This is awesome. For the next iteration, can you make a new list for extra days that need to be off for things like, oh, kids are out of school for teacher planning day?
I think it could be useful to show and take into account January 2025 as well. I'm planning my Christmas holidays including several days off in the beginning of Jan.
The ability to load up an on call schedule would be handy.
This is a clever project; thanks for sharing.
It demonstrates nicely why I strongly prefer an "unlimited PTO" policy: I never want to have to think about any of this.
Out of interest, how many days leave do you actually take in an average year?
I don't precisely know - that's the beauty of it! More than I used to take when I had to cautiously ration each precious day out from a limited supply, each time asking "is this really important enough to spend a PTO day on, and will I be leaving enough days in reserve in case something more important comes up later?" Now I just go when I feel like going, and there's no stress about it.
I don't get it. This doesn't net you additional days of vacation. A day off in the middle of the week is still a day off, and rejuvenating.
That's pretty cool. Unfortunately school holidays mean I can't take time off whenever, but I can definitely use the idea to plan time off around those.
I have a planned trip to work around. I want to make sure those are booked, and allocate the rest optimally. I suppose this is the same problem as having extra days to allocate.
Cool tool! I was always doing this manually... :-D
Only complain I have is that there is no setting to display Monday as the first day on the calendar display, not Sunday.
Love the idea
UK is missing the August bank holiday btw. And for bank holidays the UK is split in two 3 lists: England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland
Nice site, but my time off planning start in October to September of the next year. I wish I could specify that. Keep up with the nice work!
Neat idea. I actually optimize the opposite. I want the most 3-day weekends I can have per year, as evenly spaced across the year as possible.
The line that says "let's stretch your time off from X days to Y days" is actually misleading, because algorithm optimises for longer consecutive vacations, not for larger amount of vacation days.
Following your strategy the Y will be 3 for any PTO day taken, with public holidays total would easily hit 60+ days.
The domain is banned on my work VPN, gave me a good laugh.
FYI your site is blocked by corporate firewall, guessing SSL cert issue. Seems to happen with a lot of hobby project sites.
This tool confirms it visually: May is mostly a "month off" in France, with three bank holidays in three weeks.
I knew a guy that just took Friday off every day.
Three day weekends for 14 weeks of May/June/July/August = win.
Great work. Coincidentally, I am working on similar tool built using Sveltekit and posted about it on HN today as well :-)
Very cool! It would be helpful if you just made a list of holidays we could check off. Im going to use this!
Thanks so much! ChatGPT and I just added a quick feature to hide certain holidays from a particular year, stored in LocalStorage. Let me know if it works like you expect :)
Would be nice if I could add my own holidays instead of only remove them
Or «how to get hated by your co-workers ». I appreciate the technical challenge there tho.
For us that are parents, an option to load in spring break, summer break, etc. would be helpful.
a good idea but if you count holidays without week-end, and then there is a bank holiday on a friday or a monday, you shouldn't add those 3 days to the total stretched off
Great tool and excellent design . I’ve always wanted something like this.
On a related note, I sometimes take days off to get work done.
Cool, based on geolocation it gets the vacation days for your country.
Looks like I just need to find a job that offers 251 PTO days.
Would be a lot better if the calendar didn't start with Sunday.
Office netblocker flagged this as pornography. Of course.
Doesn't seem to work at all for Australia.
Wanted to check what my holidays would have looked like before Christ, but I was able to break it completely by setting year -1 xD
A quick snippet for console if you really want to break it like me:
for(let i = 0; i < 2024; i++) document.querySelector('body > div:nth-child(1) > main > div:nth-child(2) > p > span:nth-child(4) > button:nth-child(1)').click()
Cool. But I absolutely HATE geolocation via IP.
Thanks, because this is useful.
Thanks for sharing