October Revolution Day

Day of the Great October Socialist Revolution
День Великой Октябрьской социалистической революции
October Revolution Day in Leningrad, 1976
Observed byoriginated from  Soviet Russia Soviet Union
(1918–1991)
 Belarus
(since 1995)
 Transnistria
TypeNational Day
CelebrationsFlag hoisting, parades, fireworks, award ceremonies, singing patriotic songs and the national anthem, speeches by the CPSU General Secretary, entertainment and cultural programs
Date7 November
Next time7 November 2025 (2025-11-07)
Frequencyannual
Related toGreat October Socialist Revolution

October Revolution Day (officially Day of the Great October Socialist Revolution, Russian: День Великой Октябрьской социалистической революции) was a public holiday in the Soviet Union and other Soviet-aligned states, officially observed on November 7 from 1927 to 1990, commemorating the 1917 October Revolution.

For Soviet families, it was a holiday tradition to partake in a shared morning meal, and to watch the October Revolution Parade broadcast on Soviet Central Television.

A holiday canon was established during the Stalinist period, and included a workers' demonstration, the appearance of leaders on the podium of the Mausoleum, and, finally, the military parade on Red Square, which was held unfailingly every year (bar the years 1942-45), and most famously in 1941, as the Axis forces were advancing on Moscow.