About

About GetMoreDaysOff

We build practical holiday planning tools that combine public holidays, long weekends, school breaks, and leave strategy into one clear workflow.

GetMoreDaysOff started from a simple real-world problem: many people have fixed annual leave but do not have a simple way to turn those days into meaningful, longer breaks. Traditional calendars show dates, but they do not show opportunity. We built this platform to close that gap with a planning system that is easy to trust and easy to act on.

Our core idea is straightforward. A good holiday planner should not just list events. It should explain timing, highlight bridge-day windows, show country and regional differences, and suggest practical next moves. That is why our pages connect data, context, and action: discover opportunities, compare scenarios, then move directly into a leave-planner flow.

We operate with a product mindset that values clarity over noise. Every page should help users answer a concrete question: Which days matter? Where is the best return on leave? Which period fits family travel constraints? Our editorial and SEO structure follows this same principle, so both people and search engines can understand intent quickly.

Data quality first

Official-source discipline, normalized country-year records, and transparent reference pages.

Actionable structure

Discover opportunities, compare trade-offs, then move into leave-planner variants with clear next steps.

Global intent coverage

Country hubs and long-tail routes designed for multilingual planning demand across Europe.

What we build and why it matters

We design a connected set of planning pages instead of isolated tools. Country hubs provide the strategic overview. Public-holiday pages answer exact date intent. Long-weekend pages prioritize bridge opportunities. School-holiday pages support family timing. The leave planner then converts all of that context into realistic action. This linked model helps users avoid fragmented planning and creates a stronger experience for search, navigation, and conversion.

A holiday date alone rarely tells the full story. A useful planning product needs to explain sequence, overlap, and trade-offs. For example, one country can have fewer total public holidays but still produce higher leave efficiency if those holidays align with weekends. Another country can have more holidays but weaker bridge timing. We make these differences visible so users can make decisions with confidence rather than assumptions.

Data standards, trust, and update workflow

Trust begins with source discipline. We prioritize official government publications and recognized public feeds, then normalize country, region, and year data into a planning-friendly structure. This process includes naming consistency, date standardization, and quality checks that reduce ambiguity when users compare countries or build leave scenarios. We also keep clear data-source pages so users can see where records come from.

No public data ecosystem is perfect, especially across many jurisdictions and changing policy calendars. Because of that reality, we focus on transparent communication and practical safeguards. We make it clear that users should verify final booking and employer approval details, and we treat data quality as an ongoing operational process rather than a one-time import. The goal is not theoretical completeness; the goal is reliable planning decisions at scale.

How editorial SEO supports user outcomes

Our SEO strategy is intentionally user-first. We target high-intent queries that map to real planning jobs: country plus year pages, leave-day variants, and comparison routes. Each page is structured to provide a fast answer, context for trade-offs, and direct pathways to the next decision. This improves crawl clarity while also reducing user friction, because the navigation mirrors the natural decision sequence people follow when planning time off.

Internal linking is not treated as decoration. It is the planning spine of the product. We connect country hubs, long-weekend pages, and leave-planner variants so users can move from discovery to action without restarting their research. This creates stronger topical authority and better session depth while keeping content useful for both first-time visitors and returning users comparing multiple options over time.

Who we serve and how we improve

GetMoreDaysOff is built for multiple planning contexts: employees optimizing annual leave, families aligning with school calendars, and cross-border workers comparing legal holiday timing across countries. These users share one need: practical clarity under real constraints. We therefore optimize for readability, explainability, and direct action, not for vanity metrics. Every page should help users answer what to do next, not just what happened on a calendar.

We continuously refine the platform based on usage patterns, feedback, and data quality checks. Product improvements include better query coverage, clearer schema markup, stronger multilingual metadata, and tighter internal-link logic. Our long-term direction is simple: make holiday planning easier to understand, faster to execute, and more trustworthy across languages, countries, and evolving user needs.

Core planning pages

Use these core routes to move from discovery to execution in one planning session.

Frequently asked questions

What does GetMoreDaysOff do in practice?

It helps you analyze public holidays, long weekends, and school-holiday overlap so you can build a stronger leave plan with fewer leave days.

How do you keep data quality reliable?

We rely on official public data sources, normalize records per country and year, and keep update workflows visible through data-source and policy pages.

Who is this platform built for?

Employees, families, cross-border workers, and travelers who need better visibility on holiday timing before booking trips or requesting leave.

Plan smarter with the right context

Explore country hubs first, then open leave-planner scenarios to convert calendar insight into a practical time-off strategy.

About GetMoreDaysOff | GetMoreDaysOff