Why banks are closed for 3 days this week
Why are banks closed for three consecutive days? In which states and union territories are banks closed for three consecutive days? Saturday and Sunday bank
Why are banks closed for three consecutive days? In which states and union territories are banks closed for three consecutive days? Saturday and Sunday bank holidays Bank holidays in June 2026 Jun-26 15 22 26 29 30 Agartala • Ahmedabad Aizawl • • • Belapur • Bengaluru • Bhopal • Bhubaneswar • Chandigarh Chennai • Dehradun Gangtok Guwahati Hyderabad • Imphal Itanagar Jaipur Jammu • Kanpur • Kochi Kohima Kolkata • Lucknow • Mumbai • Nagpur • New Delhi • Panaji Patna • Raipur • Ranchi • Shillong • Shimla • Srinagar • Thiruvananthapuram Vijayawada • Banks in various states and union territories will be closed for three consecutive days (Friday, Saturday and Sunday) this week.
If you have important bank-related work that has to be done this week, you should plan it in advance to avoid inconvenience.Banks are closed for three consecutive days on Friday for Muharram (June 26, 2026) followed by fourth Saturday (June 27) and Sunday (June 28).States and union territories where banks are closed for June 26, 2026, are Tripura, Mizoram, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Jammu and Kashmir, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Delhi, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, and Andhra
Pradesh. In total, 15 states/UTs will have a holiday on June 26.In India, all scheduled and non-scheduled banks will observe public holidays on the second and fourth Saturdays.Therefore, bank customers residing in these states and union territories must complete their tasks before Friday if they require a branch visit.Banks in June will be closed on various occasions like YMA Day/Raja Sankranti, Moharrum, Muharram (Yaum-e-Shahadath)/last day of Moharam/Ashoora, Sant Guru Kabir Jayanti and Remna Ni.Though there are many transactions that
can be done online, there are few transactions which still need a branch visit.Opening certain types of accounts requires in-person verification and a visit to a bank branch. Other than that, you may also require to visit a bank for updating or changing your signature in bank records, closing a savings or current account, reporting loss of passbook and obtaining a new one in some cases, applying for certain loans or restructuring existing loans that require physical document submission.