How Long Does 7 to 10 Business Days Take for Delivery?
Quick Answer: 7 to 10 working days usually equates to 9 to 14 calendar days. If there is a public holiday during this period, the delivery time may be extended to up to 16 calendar days.
Spoiler: it’s not two calendar weeks. Almost, but not quite.
If you bought something today — Wednesday 13 May 2026 — and the screen displayed “Ships in 7 to 10 business days”, your parcel won’t arrive on 20 May. Nor on 23 May.
It will, in all likelihood, arrive between Tuesday 26 May and Friday 29 May. Why? Because weekends don’t count, federal holidays (such as Memorial Day on 25 May) don’t count either, and the day you click “Buy” is an administrative phantom, not Day 1.
That time lag is exactly what most guides overlook. Here’s a precise and surgical solution.
7–10 Business Days Shipping Calculator
Use our interactive tool to get your actual delivery date without any manual errors.
📦 7-10 Business Days Shipping Calculator
Find exactly when your package arrives — weekends & carrier-specific holidays excluded.
We invite you to try out our main calculator on the Business Days Calculator page
Business Days vs. Calendar Days: The Quick Answer
Take a deep breath. Here’s the conversion you’re looking for on Google—and which most other websites only hint at in convoluted paragraphs:
5 business days ≈ 7–9 calendar days.
7 business days ≈ 9–11 calendar days.
10 business days ≈ 12–14 calendar days.
But that “≈” is a trap if there’s a public holiday in between. In 2026, Memorial Day (Monday 25 May) adds an extra 24 hours to everything. The same goes for Juneteenth, 4 July or Thanksgiving.
The Golden Rule:
Count the working days forward as if Saturdays and Sundays didn’t exist. Then add the public holidays from the official calendar of the USPS, FedEx or your carrier.
Scenario: Real-Life Calculation (May 2026)
As we don’t want you to be left in the dark, let’s look at a real-life scenario based on today’s date:
Scenario: Order placed on Wednesday 13 May 2026 at 4:00 pm. The shop’s cut-off time is 2:00 pm.
| Step | Event | Date |
|---|---|---|
| Day 0 | Order placed (Post-cutoff) | Wednesday, May 13 |
| Day 1 | First full business day | Thursday, May 14 |
| Day 7 | Early delivery (Affected by Memorial Day) | Tuesday, May 26 |
| Day 10 | Maximum delivery | Friday, May 29 |
Factors That Disrupt Your Delivery Schedule
These are the silent culprits that cause your parcel to arrive just when you’ve forgotten what you ordered:
1. Weekends and Public Holidays
USPS, FedEx and UPS all agree that Saturdays and Sundays are not standard working days. However:
USPS delivers on Saturdays for Priority Mail Express services.
FedEx Home Delivery delivers on Saturdays and Sundays in many areas.
Tip: Always check the FedEx Holiday Calendar to avoid surprises.
2. Order Cut-off Times
If you place an order at 2:01 pm and the cut-off is 2:00 pm, your ‘Day 1’ is automatically pushed back by 24 hours. The count starts on the first full working day after the warehouse processes your order.
Shipping Carrier Breakdown: USPS vs. FedEx vs. UPS
| Carrier | Counts Saturday as a Business Day? | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| USPS | Yes (partially) | Ideal for urban areas. Watch out for their holidays. |
| FedEx | Only Home Delivery | Traditional Ground service does not count Saturdays. |
| UPS | Only Air services | UPS Ground is the workhorse, but it does not count weekends. |
International Shipping: Why 10 Days is a Miracle
Crossing borders turns the delivery schedule into a leap of faith. Customs is the X factor. If your parcel says ‘Customs clearance in progress’, add an extra 2 to 4 working days. For international shipments, always multiply the promised delivery time by 1.3 to get a realistic estimate.
FAQ: People Also Ask
No. They are strictly Monday to Friday.
Between 1.5 and 2 full weeks.
Almost never, unless you buy very early and the dispatch is immediate.
FedEx Home Delivery usually wins out over USPS due to its more consistent tracking.