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Fall (autumn) - season countdown

How Many Days Until Fall (autumn) 2026

96 calendar days until Fall (autumn) (September 1, 2026, Tuesday). Meteorological season start in the Northern Hemisphere.

Meteorological season · updates daily

Today is: Thursday, May 28, 2026

Next Fall (autumn) starts:

September 1, 2026

(Tuesday)

96calendar days until that date
What to know: Northern Hemisphere meteorological seasons: Fall (autumn) begins on September 1 each year (same rule as the Days Until season table). Counts are full calendar days from today through the start of that season.

Other season countdowns

Related tools

Days Until - main calculator with holidays, month starts, and this season list. Days Between Dates for the same two-date math without the extra countdown tables. Calendar and Days From Today.

FAQ

How Many Days Until Fall (autumn) 2026

From today, 96 full calendar days until the start of Fall (autumn) on September 1, 2026 (Tuesday, 2026).

Is this astronomical spring (vernal equinox) or summer solstice?

No. These are meteorological season starts on fixed calendar dates. Astronomical seasons move with the sun; meteorological seasons are easier for month-aligned planning.

What time zone is used?

“Today” and the countdown use your browser’s local time zone, the same as your device clock.

When does the counter roll to the next year?

After September 1, 2026 passes, this page shows the countdown to the following year’s Fall (autumn) start.

Tips & Strategies

Quick tip. Southern Hemisphere seasons are offset by six months; this page is Northern Hemisphere only.

For any custom “days until” range. use the date pickers on the main Days Until calculator.

Quick tip. Federal holidays and observances have their own longtail pages; see the holiday table on Days Until.

Cross-check when the decision matters. Run a second scenario with rounded inputs or a different path to the same quantity so you do not rely on a single fragile chain of arithmetic.

Write down units and rounding rules next to the answer. Half of spreadsheet mistakes are inconsistent units or silent rounding; noting assumptions makes the number usable a month later.

Things Worth Knowing

  • Meteorological “winter” often lines up with peak heating demand even when snow arrives earlier or later.
  • Many school districts plan semesters around calendar months, not solstices.
  • Business quarters (Q1–Q4) also follow calendar months, not astronomical seasons.