It's little over a month away until everyone in the UK gets an extra day off work to celebrate the Queen.
Buckingham Palace confirmed that there will be a four-day Bank Holiday weekend to mark the Queen's Platinum Jubilee, the first British monarch in history to pass the impressive milestone.
The long weekend will be from June 2 to June 5, but a clever trick means that you could have a whopping nine days off in a row by only using up three days of precious annual leave.
To do this, you must book off Monday, May 30, Tuesday, May 31, and Wednesday, June 1 as paid holiday. The additional Jubilee bank holidays will then come on Thursday, June 2 and Friday, June 3.
This will give you a total of five days off altogether, but then if you take account of the weekends which fall on either side on Saturday, May 28 and Sunday, May 29, and then Saturday, June 4 and Sunday, June 5, you will have nine days off despite only using three days of annual leave.
You can leave work on Saturday, May 28 and not go back in again until Monday, June 6.
This trick is very good, but does only work if you don't work weekends or bank holidays, in which case you might still have to work some of those days.
In the UK, full time workers are entitled to 28 days of paid annual leave, though some employers count bank holidays in those days off.
The Platinum Jubilee will mark 70 years of Elizabeth being on the throne.
Elizabeth II is both the longest reigning UK monarch and the first in history to reach a Platinum Jubilee, coming to the throne when she was only 25 years old.
The next longest serving British monarch is Queen Victoria, who was on the throne for 63 years and 216 days.
Elizabeth is the longest reigning incumbent monarch, and if she is still on the throne on May 27 2024 she will become the longest reigning monarch of any sovereign state, surpassing Louis XIV of France who reigned from May 14 1643 to September 1 1715, a whopping 72 years and 110 days.
The shortest reigning monarch in England was Lady Jane Grey, who reigned for just nine days from July 10 until July 19 1553.
Elizabeth's 70 year anniversary was actually on February 6 but she decided to postpone the commemoration as it was the date of her father's death.
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