5 consecutive days off
Thu 1 Jan 2026 to Mon 5 Jan 2026
1 leave day to book • 1 RTT • 1 public holiday
Day-by-day view
Thu
1
Jour de l'an
Fri
2
RTT
Sat
3
Weekend
Sun
4
Weekend
Mon
5
Paid leave
A simple guide to turn 10 days into real breaks without starting from a blank calendar.
How to read this guide
Start with the examples and the highlighted cases. Once one situation looks close to yours, switch back to the planner to validate the exact dates.
Search intent
These pages are meant to answer one concrete planning question fast. The planner remains the place where your budget, RTT and school-holiday settings actually decide.
Examples
These cards are not meant to replace your own simulation. They show the kinds of months that deserve to be opened first.
Thu 1 Jan 2026 to Mon 5 Jan 2026
1 leave day to book • 1 RTT • 1 public holiday
Thu
1
Jour de l'an
Fri
2
RTT
Sat
3
Weekend
Sun
4
Weekend
Mon
5
Paid leave
Thu 2 Apr 2026 to Mon 6 Apr 2026
1 leave day to book • 1 RTT • 1 public holiday
Thu
2
RTT
Fri
3
Paid leave
Sat
4
Weekend
Sun
5
Weekend
Mon
6
Lundi de Pâques
Fri 1 May 2026 to Tue 5 May 2026
1 leave day to book • 1 RTT • 1 public holiday
Fri
1
Fête du Travail
Sat
2
Weekend
Sun
3
Weekend
Mon
4
RTT
Tue
5
Paid leave
Useful point
With 10 days, the right reflex is to test dense periods such as May first, then see whether a second strong moment is still worth arbitrating.
Example
Example: start with May, then check whether a second block later in the year is more useful than spending everything at once.
Avoid this trap
Avoid this trap: copying a plan designed for 15 days when your actual budget stays lower.
Ready to test?
Next step