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TL;DRMarch holidays 2026:Sat, 14 Mar – Sun, 22 Mar 2026 (9 days).
School day off-in-lieu:Mon, 23 Mar 2026 (Hari Raya Puasa falls on Sat 21 Mar).
Students return:Tue, 24 Mar 2026 - confirm with your school.
Full-year calendar + downloads: MOE school holidays 2026
Official MOE dates
Key date
Details
March holiday block
Sat, 14 Mar – Sun, 22 Mar 2026 (9 days)
School day off-in-lieu
Mon, 23 Mar 2026 - schools closed (Hari Raya Puasa on Sat 21 Mar)
First school day back
Tue, 24 Mar 2026 (confirm with your school)
Total days off
10 days (Sat 14 Mar – Mon 23 Mar, inclusive)
Last updated 2026-03-14 against MOE's official School Terms and Holidays for 2026 press release.
That's the reference. The rest of this guide is about what to actually do with those 10 days.
Why the March break is different from every other holiday
June is for recovery. December is for reset. March is for decisions.
The March break sits at a specific pressure point: it falls right after Term 1 ends and right before Term 2 begins. CA1 or WA1 results have either just come back or are about to. That makes this break fundamentally different from the longer holidays - it's the first time in the school year where you have data on what's working and what isn't.
Three tensions show up in parent and student communities every March:
1. The student tension. Results just landed. Some topics clearly need work. But the idea of 10 days of revision sounds miserable - and students who just finished exams need a buffer before they can learn anything again.
2. The parent tension. Do I sign my child up for a crash course? This gets debated on parent forums every single year. The honest answer depends on whether you can name the specific gap. If you can't, "catch-up" without a target is just expensive babysitting.
3. The logistics tension. Ten days of no school. Both parents work. Grandparents aren't nearby. The March break is too short for most holiday camps to run a full programme - supply is tighter than June. Who watches the kids on Tuesday?
None of these are answered by a date table or an activities listicle. The sections below address each one.
After CA1: fix one thing, not everything
The families who use the March break well do one targeted thing. They don't try to revise the entire Term 1 syllabus. They identify the single weakest topic from CA1 and fix that before Term 2 builds on it.
The decision tree
Did your child get CA1/WA1 results back?
Yes → Look at the paper. Which single topic cost the most marks? That's your March target. Ignore the rest.
Not yet → Preview the first unit of Term 2 instead. One chapter, not three.
Is this a national exam year (PSLE, O-Level, A-Level)?
Yes → Don't revise content during the March break. Build the revision system - a timetable, a topic tracker, a realistic schedule for the rest of the year. March is for planning, not cramming. The content revision comes later.
No → One topic. Two hours a day. Five weekdays. Then stop.
What to focus on - and what to skip
Level
What to do
What NOT to do
Primary 3–5
Fix the weakest CA1 topic
"Revise everything"
Primary 6 (PSLE year)
Targeted practice on 2–3 weak question types from CA1 - see the full PSLE exam dates 2026 timeline
Buy 10 new assessment books
Sec 1–3
Patch the prerequisite for Term 2's first unit (e.g. if Sec 2 Maths moves to algebraic fractions, make sure linear equations are solid)
Start tuition for a brand-new subject
Sec 4/5 (O-Level year)
Build a year-long revision schedule
Cram content you'll forget by April
JC1
Consolidate H2 foundation from the first 10 weeks - the pace is about to get worse
Ignore the pace problem
JC2 (A-Level year)
Timed practice on 1–2 weaker H2 topics; start building a prelim revision timetable
Try to "finish the syllabus"
The "What NOT to do" column matters more than the "What to do" column. Most holiday study plans fail because they're too ambitious, not because the student was lazy.
How many hours per day?
Two hours of focused work per day is the rough consensus across parent forums. It's not a magic number - it's the ceiling where gains stop compounding and burnout starts. Students who study 6+ hours a day during a 10-day break tend to report worse outcomes than those who cap at 2 hours and actually rest the remaining time.
Use 30–45 minute blocks with breaks in between. The afternoons should be free.
If you're not sure what your child should focus on: bring the CA1 paper to their tutor in the first session back after the break. Don't guess. You can also use our study plan generator to map out specific revision targets for Term 2.
Should you sign up for a March holiday crash course?
This question comes up on parent forums every year. Instead of a generic pros-and-cons list, here are three scenarios - find the one that matches your situation.
Scenario A: "My child failed or nearly failed a subject"
A targeted 3–5 day intensive on the specific failing topic can help - if the provider can tell you exactly which topics they'll cover before you sign up. If the description says "comprehensive revision" or "full syllabus review," that's a red flag. You're paying for breadth your child doesn't need.
Look for: Programmes that let you specify the weak topic upfront, small class sizes (under 10), and providers who ask to see your child's CA1 paper before the first session.
Scenario B: "My child is doing fine, but everyone else is signing up"
Skip it. The March break is 10 days. A crash course eats 3–5 of those days. If your child is performing well, the opportunity cost is rest and unstructured play they won't get back before Term 2 starts.
The fear that "everyone else is getting ahead" is real but usually overstated. A KiasuParents survey found that 66% of parents felt families spend too much on tuition - yet demand keeps rising year on year. The gap between what parents say they believe (rest matters) and what they do (sign up for boot camps) is one of the sharpest tensions in Singapore education. A well-rested student starting Term 2 with energy will outperform a burnt-out student who spent the holidays in a revision bootcamp.
Scenario C: "I need childcare, not tuition"
That's a valid reason to sign up for a holiday programme. Call it what it is. A camp that keeps your child safe, occupied, and having fun for S$200–400 is childcare - and that's completely fine. Just don't confuse it with an educational investment, and don't feel guilty if the "learning outcomes" are minimal.
Cost reality check
A typical 5-day March intensive runs S$250–500 per subject. If your child is already in regular weekly tuition (S$200–400/month), the crash course is on top of that.
Before signing up, ask yourself: would the same S$300 be better spent on five days of targeted practice at home using the CA1 paper, free TYS resources, and past-year worksheets? For most students, 80% of the result comes from fixing mistakes on the exam they just sat - and that costs nothing.
Working parents: the logistics checklist
The March break is the shortest holiday block, but it still creates a 10-day gap. If both parents work, here's what to sort out - ideally by late February.
Supervision
Week 1 (Sat 14 – Fri 18 Mar): Who's covering each day? Options in rough cost order: grandparent or helper (free), staggered WFH days between parents, 3-day camp (around 150–300 SGD), or a full-week camp (around 250–500 SGD).
Week 2 + DOIL (Sat 19 – Mon 23 Mar): Same question. Mon 23 Mar is the off-in-lieu day - schools are closed, so that's one extra day to cover.
Meals
If your child's usual after-school care or student care centre provides meals, remember that doesn't apply during the holidays. Plan for lunch.
Camp bookings
Popular March programmes fill up by late February. The supply is tighter than June because the break is shorter - fewer providers bother running a programme for just one week. Book early or have a backup plan.
The neighbour swap
Some families coordinate with schoolmates' parents to share supervision. One household takes the kids Monday and Wednesday, the other takes Tuesday and Thursday. Friday is a wildcard. It's free, the kids enjoy it, and it halves the number of leave days each family needs.
Emergency buffer
Keep one day of annual leave in reserve. If your child gets sick mid-break, a camp cancels at short notice, or your helper is unavailable, you'll need a fallback that doesn't involve rearranging your entire week.
Activities worth the time
We're not going to list 30 things to do - that's not what this guide is for. Here are five picks, each matched to a specific situation.
Need to burn energy outdoors?
→ Coney Island. Flat, car-free, good for cycling with younger kids. Bring water - there's no shelter for long stretches.
Want something educational without a worksheet?
→ National Museum or National Gallery. Free for Singapore citizens and PRs. Check for March holiday drop-in workshops before you go.
Rainy day, need 3 hours of indoor activity?
→ National Library holiday sessions. Free, air-conditioned, and many branches run storytelling or craft sessions during the break. Or try the Science Centre (S$6/student) - they usually run holiday programmes in March.
Need structured supervision disguised as fun?
→ Check your nearest community centre on OnePA. Many PAssion CCs run free or subsidised March holiday programmes. These fill up, so check the schedule early.
Family outing on the DOIL Monday (23 Mar)?
→ Changi Beach Park - quieter than East Coast Park. Or cross the Causeway: a Monday will be less jammed than the weekend.
For a comprehensive list of March holiday events, exhibitions, and camps, see Little Day Out's guide - they maintain a running list of 30+ activities updated throughout the break.
When are the March school holidays 2026?
Sat, 14 Mar – Sun, 22 Mar 2026 (9 days). Mon, 23 Mar is a school day off-in-lieu (schools closed).
Is 23 March 2026 a school holiday?
Yes - MOE designates it as a school day off-in-lieu because Hari Raya Puasa falls on Sat, 21 Mar. Schools are closed. Students typically return Tue, 24 Mar.
How much should my child study during the March holidays?
About 2 hours of focused work per day is where most experienced parents land. Focus on one weak area from CA1 rather than broad revision. See our study plan above.
Are March holiday crash courses worth it?
It depends on whether your child has a specific identified gap. We break it down into three scenarios above.
Is Good Friday 2026 near the March break?
Good Friday is Fri, 3 Apr 2026 - about 10 days after the March break ends. It creates a separate 3-day weekend (Fri 3 – Sun 5 Apr) but is not connected to the March holidays.