Friendship Day 2025: Why Is It Celebrated On The First Sunday Of August? Know History And Meaning Behind It

It always sneaks up on you. One moment you're knee-deep in work, and the next, your phone buzzes with a "Happy Friendship Day, broooo!"-complete with throwback photos from the years gone by and stickers you forgot existed. But have you ever paused to ask: Why do we celebrate Friendship Day on the first Sunday of August? Why not a fixed date, like Valentine's Day or birthdays?

Before we dive into the how, let's talk about the why and that's where the story gets interesting.

Photo Credit: Freepik

A Greeting Card And A Good Idea

It all started back in the 1930s in the United States, when greeting card companies were trying to give people more reasons to connect. Joyce Hall, the man behind Hallmark was selling something honest: a moment of expression in an otherwise fast-moving world.

Then came 1935. The US Congress declared the first Sunday of August as National Friendship Day. The world had just seen war and uncertainty. Maybe what people needed wasn't grand solutions, but something simple like checking in on the people who made life easier.

India Took It And Made It Its Own

In India, the first Sunday of August caught on in a big way especially among school and college students. It gave us something light to look forward to after July's exam stress and before the festive season began. Remember those friendship bands? Whether you bought the fanciest glitter ones or hand-made yours with wool and a little awkward handwriting, they meant something.

By celebrating on a Sunday, people actually had time to be with each other without the rush of work or school. It was all about presence.

Meanwhile, In Paraguay: A Different Start

Halfway across the globe in 1958, a man named Dr. Ramón Artemio Bracho launched the World Friendship Crusade in Paraguay, proposing July 30th as the day to honour friendships globally which wasn't tied to business. It was about peace and human connection after war, borders, and politics had done enough damage.

The United Nations later picked up that date, declaring 30 July as the International Day of Friendship in 2011. And yet, countries like India, Bangladesh, and the UAE stuck with the first Sunday of August. Because what mattered more than the date... was the feeling.

Photo Credit: Freepik

So, What's It Really About?

Friendship Day isn't just about posting selfies or digging through old messages to send something on time. It's about that one person who sticks around when you're not exactly a treat to be around. The friend who tells you when you're wrong, but still shows up with your favourite snack. The ones who've seen your mess and never left your side.

Maybe your circle's smaller than it once was. Maybe you've grown apart from people you once promised to never lose touch with. That's okay. The beauty of this day is that it isn't just about keeping old bonds alive, it's also about recognising the new ones quietly forming around you, unnoticed.

And If You're Not Celebrating With Anyone...

That's fine, too. Really. Sometimes, the best kind of friendship is the one you start building with yourself. Taking yourself out for coffee, starting that long-postponed hobby, or texting someone you miss even if it's been awkwardly long. There's no one-size-fits-all here.

Friendship Day isn't a test. It's a soft nudge to check in with others and yourself.

This Year, Let's Keep It Real

Friendship Day 2025 falls on Sunday, August 3rd. Whether you're meeting up with friends, scrolling through shared memories, or simply acknowledging the handful of people who keep you grounded-you're celebrating it right. Because the point was never to trend. It was to connect.

Friendship Day may not have a fixed date across the world, but its meaning is steady, it's a reminder to hold close the people who add meaning to your days. Where we are all engrossed in fleeting texts, missed calls, and social media chaos, this Sunday-August 3, 2025 gives you a moment to reflect, to reach out, or to be thankful.

Photo Credit: Freepik

So go ahead. Send the message. Tie the band. Share that slightly embarrassing memory. Because it's Friendship Day and for once, no one's expecting anything more than what you already have: a real connection.