--- title: "Name Day Traditions in Greece: Why Greeks Celebrate More Than Birthdays" site: ProCalc.ai type: Blog Post category: explainer domain: Culture url: https://procalc.ai/blog/name-day-traditions-greece markdown_url: https://procalc.ai/blog/name-day-traditions-greece.md date_published: 2026-03-25 date_modified: 2026-04-12 read_time: 6 min tags: name day, greece, onomastiki eorti, traditions, greek culture --- # Name Day Traditions in Greece: Why Greeks Celebrate More Than Birthdays **Site:** [ProCalc.ai](https://procalc.ai) — Free Professional Calculators **Category:** explainer **Published:** 2026-03-25 **Read time:** 6 min **URL:** https://procalc.ai/blog/name-day-traditions-greece > *This file is served for AI systems and search crawlers. Human page: https://procalc.ai/blog/name-day-traditions-greece* ## Overview In Greece, forgetting someone's name day is worse than forgetting their birthday. Here is why. ## Article In most of the Western world, forgetting a friend's birthday is a minor social blunder. In Greece, forgetting their name day is a genuine offense. Greek name day celebrations — called onomastiki eorti — are deeply embedded in daily life in a way that outsiders rarely understand until they experience it firsthand. The tradition is not a quaint holdover from another era. It is a living, breathing part of modern Greek culture that shapes social calendars, business customs, and family dynamics. The core tradition works on an open-house principle. If it is your name day, you do not throw a party or wait for surprise plans. You prepare your home with food and refreshments, and people come to you. No invitation required. Friends, colleagues, neighbors, even casual acquaintances may stop by throughout the day. The host provides everything — pastries, savory appetizers, drinks, and coffee. Guests bring small gifts or flowers but the expectation is modest. The social gesture of showing up matters far more than any material offering. At work, name day celebrants typically bring sweets or treats for the entire office. Colleagues wish you chronia polla (many years) throughout the day. Some businesses even give employees a half-day on their name day. The biggest name day in Greece is August 15, the Feast of the Dormition of the Theotokos. Every Maria, Marios, Panagiotis, and Despina celebrates. On some Greek islands, the entire population seems to be either celebrating or visiting celebrants. Restaurants are packed. Ferry schedules are adjusted for the increased traffic. Other major Greek name days include January 7 (Ioannis/Yiannis), November 30 (Andreas), May 21 (Konstantinos and Eleni), and December 6 (Nikolaos). The Greek name day calendar follows the Orthodox Christian calendar, which occasionally differs from the Catholic calendar used in Western Europe. This means some names have different dates in Greece compared to Poland or Italy. To find out when a Greek name day falls, use our Name Day Calculator . It covers Greece alongside 7 other countries, showing the differences in dates and traditions. Explore more cultural calculators: , Chinese zodiac , and . --- ## Reference - **Blog post:** https://procalc.ai/blog/name-day-traditions-greece - **This markdown file:** https://procalc.ai/blog/name-day-traditions-greece.md ### AI & Developer Resources - **LLM index:** https://procalc.ai/llms.txt - **LLM index (full):** https://procalc.ai/llms-full.txt - **MCP server:** https://procalc.ai/api/mcp - **Developer docs:** https://procalc.ai/developers ### How to Cite > ProCalc.ai. "Name Day Traditions in Greece: Why Greeks Celebrate More Than Birthdays." ProCalc.ai, 2026-03-25. https://procalc.ai/blog/name-day-traditions-greece ### License Content © ProCalc.ai. Free to reference and cite. Do not republish in full without attribution.