The Jewish Holiday of Sukkot
This post, The Jewish Holiday of Sukkot , may contain affiliate links, which means Happy Hive Homeschooling may receive a commission, at no extra cost to you, if you make a purchase through a link. Please see our full disclosure for further information.
The date for Sukkot varies each year. This is because Jewish Holidays are celebrated based on the Lunar Calendar, not the Gregorian Calendar. Sukkot begins at sundown on the first day and completes at nightfall after 8 days.
The Pilgrims were familiar with the tradition of Sukkot, and modeled their celebratory feast after it in 1621 during the first harvest season in the New World. The first Thanksgiving was celebrated in October and lasted for three days. This celebration eventually morphed into our modern-day Thanksgiving…
This is a guest post written by our friends at Homeschool On the Range.
Sukkot is the Jewish harvest festival. It begins five days after Yom Kippur and lasts for nine days, and is called the Feast of Booths because of the special custom of building a small hut, the sukkah, outdoors. The Hebrew calendar date is the 15th day of the month of Tishrei. This date always coincides with the evening of the full moon closest to the autumnal equinox, otherwise known as the Harvest Moon.
Many Jewish families build a sukkah, a hut reminiscent of the temporary booths in which the Hebrews lived as they wandered forty years through the desert after the Exodus from Egypt. Jewish people who have gardens build their sukkah at home. People who live in the city may share one built at a synagogue. The booths are decorated with autumn leaves, pumpkins, and wheat stalks. Depending on the weather, people eat, live, and may even sleep in them, just as the Israelites did.
Special thanks to Yvie for this post.
Yvie is a veteran homeschooling mom and high school counselor and teaches online co-op classes for upper grades at Sparks Academy. She helps to create unit studies and enjoys helping other families on their homeschool journey. When not teaching or counseling, she enjoys reading, spending time in her garden, and traveling the country with her boys. You can find her at Homeschool On the Range, on Facebook, Instagram, or Pinterest.
Learn more in this post: WHAT IS SUKKOT?
Jewish Year 5785: Sunset October 16, 2024 – Nightfall October 23, 2024
Jewish Year 5786: Sunset October 6, 2025 – Nightfall October 13, 2025
Jewish Year 5787: Sunset September 25, 2026 – Nightfall October 2, 2026
Jewish Year 5788: Sunset October 15, 2027 – Nightfall October 22, 2027
Jewish Year 5789: Sunset October 4, 2028 – Nightfall October 11, 2028
Jewish Year 5790: Sunset September 23, 2029 – Nightfall September 30, 2029
Jewish Year 5791: Sunset October 11, 2030 – Nightfall October 18, 2030
Can’t celebrate this year – Mark your calendar & save this holiday for next year!
You can also pin the image below to your Pinterest boards to save this fantastic holiday!

Return to main calendar HERE
Want Ideas for celebrating in your inbox every day? Sign up for our Holiday of the Day newsletter and get everything you need for easy Holiday Celebrations!