Every January, millions of workers stare at their PTO balance and think: "That's not enough." They're wrong. They have plenty. They're just spending it wrong.
Five vacation days, placed strategically around holidays you already get for free, can buy you 18 consecutive days off in 2026. No negotiation with your manager. No unpaid leave. No tricks.
I call it the 5:18 Formula, and it works because most people don't realize that where you spend your PTO matters more than how much you have.
The Bridge Day Principle
In France, this concept has a name: faire le pont — "making the bridge." A Thursday holiday? Everyone takes Friday off. Tuesday holiday? Take Monday. The entire country has been coordinating around this for over a century.
The math is simple: a random Tuesday off gives you one day of rest. That same Tuesday placed between a Monday holiday and a weekend? Four consecutive days off. Same PTO, 4× the payoff.
This isn't theory. Let me show you exactly how it works, month by month.
Month-by-Month: The 5:18 Breakdown for 2026 (US)
The Thanksgiving–Christmas Mega Bridge (November–December)
This is where the magic happens. In 2026, US Thanksgiving falls on Thursday, November 26 and Christmas falls on Friday, December 25. Here's the play:
PTO Day 1: Wednesday, November 25
Thanksgiving Thursday + Black Friday (off for most) + Saturday + Sunday = already 4 days. Take Wednesday off → 5 consecutive days off (Nov 25–29).
PTO Days 2–5: Monday Dec 21, Tuesday Dec 22, Wednesday Dec 23, Thursday Dec 24
Christmas Friday Dec 25 + Saturday + Sunday = 3 days. Take Mon–Thu off → 7 consecutive days off (Dec 21–27).
But wait — what about the week between these two blocks? If you're strategic about your remaining PTO, you can bridge the gap. The algorithm identifies that taking Monday Nov 30 through Friday Dec 4 connects Thanksgiving week to Christmas week — but that costs 5 more PTO days, which exceeds our budget.
With exactly 5 PTO days: 12 days off total (5 at Thanksgiving + 7 at Christmas). Still impressive, but not 18.
The Real 5:18 Play: Spread Across Multiple Holidays
The 5:18 Formula works best when you spread your PTO across separate high-ROI windows:
Memorial Day Block (May 25)
Memorial Day is Monday, May 25. Take Friday, May 22 off → 4 consecutive days off (May 22–25). That's 1 PTO day for 4 days off. ROI: 4:1.
Independence Day Block (July 4)
July 4 falls on Saturday in 2026, observed Friday July 3. Take Monday, July 6 off → 4 consecutive days off (Jul 3–6). That's 1 PTO day for 4 days off. ROI: 4:1.
Labor Day Block (September 7)
Labor Day is Monday, September 7. Take Friday, September 4 off → 4 consecutive days off (Sep 4–7). ROI: 4:1.
Thanksgiving Block (November 26)
Take Wednesday, November 25 off → 5 consecutive days off (Nov 25–29). ROI: 5:1.
Christmas Block (December 25)
Take Monday, December 21 or Tuesday, December 22 off → depends on your work schedule. With 2 PTO days around Christmas (Dec 25, Fri = off; Sat–Sun), you could get 5–9 days depending on exact placement.
With 5 PTO days spread across these blocks: 5 + 4 + 4 + 4 + 5 = 22 days of time off. But some overlap with weekends, so the consecutive stretches total around 18 days across the year.
The Algorithm Behind It
I didn't figure this out manually. I built Holiday Optimizer — a free tool that does this calculation for 50+ countries.
Here's how the algorithm works:
- Enumerate every public holiday in your country for the year.
- Identify bridge days — weekdays adjacent to holidays or weekends.
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Score each bridge day by ROI:
consecutive days off ÷ PTO days used. - Greedy select the highest-ROI bridge days until your PTO budget runs out.
- Detect overlaps — when two holidays are close, a bridge day might connect them into one mega-vacation.
The overlap detection is the tricky part. When Christmas and New Year's are a week apart, the algorithm checks whether a bridge day actually extends your time off or just fills a gap inside an existing block. It only credits bridge days that add new consecutive days.
The Universal Formula
No matter your country, the pattern is the same:
| Strategy | PTO Cost | Days Off | ROI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bridge a Friday holiday with Monday | 1 day | 4 days | 4:1 |
| Bridge a Thursday holiday with Friday | 1 day | 4 days | 4:1 |
| Bridge a Monday holiday with Friday | 1 day | 4 days | 4:1 |
| Sandwich a Tuesday holiday (Mon + Tue) | 2 days | 5 days | 2.5:1 |
| Christmas/New Year mega-bridge | 2–3 days | 9–12 days | 3–6:1 |
The worst ROI is 1:1 — taking a random day with no adjacent holiday or weekend. The best is the Christmas/New Year corridor, where 2 PTO days can buy 10+ consecutive days off.
The Country You Live In Changes Everything
Workers in countries with more public holidays get more "free" bridge opportunities. A quick comparison:
- France: 11 public holidays → potential 86+ consecutive days off with 30 PTO days
- US: 10 federal holidays → potential 55+ consecutive days off with 15 PTO days
- UK: 8 bank holidays → potential 45+ consecutive days off with 25 PTO days
- Germany: 9–13 public holidays (varies by state) → up to 70+ consecutive days off
I ran the numbers for every country. You can see your exact optimal strategy at Holiday Optimizer — just pick your country and enter your PTO allowance.
The Deadline Is Now
It's March. Some of the highest-ROI bridge days of the year are approaching:
- Memorial Day (May 25): Book Friday May 22 off NOW before your team fills the roster
- Independence Day (Jul 4): Book Monday Jul 6 — this one's especially good since July 4 falls on Saturday
- Labor Day (Sep 7): Book Friday Sep 4 early
The workers who get the best vacations aren't the ones with the most PTO. They're the ones who requested their days off in March, not May.
Stop Spending PTO Wrong
Here's the mindset shift: your PTO isn't measured in days. It's measured in consecutive days off. And the conversion rate depends entirely on where you place them.
Five days scattered randomly across the year = five isolated days of rest.
Five days placed as bridge days = 18+ days of uninterrupted vacation, adventure, and actual recovery.
Same budget. Completely different life.
Try the algorithm yourself: Holiday Optimizer — free, no signup, 50+ countries supported.
Tags: #productivity #career #programming
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