Ordinal Day Reference
Day 267 of 2026
September 24, 2026 falls on a Thursday and is written in ISO-8601 ordinal format as 2026-267.
Direct Answer
Day 267 of 2026 maps to 2026-267. There are 98 days remaining after this point in the year.This position falls in Q3 and is commonly expressed in ISO-8601 as 2026-267.
Reference Tools
2026-267
Day 267 references September 24. Use the live UTC countdown and copy-ready formats below when you need to move between labels, spreadsheets, SQL, and APIs quickly.
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19:31:43
Time until the next ordinal day begins at 00:00 UTC.
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Technical Masterclass
What day 267 means in practice
Day 267 is a high-signal coordinate inside the 2026 calendar because it converts the messiness of month lengths into one exact integer. On the civil calendar it maps to September 24, in the month of September, and it marks 73.150685 percent of the year on an inclusive day-of-year basis. That sounds simple, but it matters in every environment where elapsed time has to be counted without ambiguity. A timestamp, a batch label, a compliance form, and a reporting export can all point at the same position in the year by referring to one ordinal number rather than a month-and-day string that has to be parsed, localized, and normalized.
From an operational perspective, day 267 is also day 86 of Q3. That quarter-relative position is useful because finance and operations teams often benchmark execution against quarter clocks rather than against months. Monthly boundaries are irregular. Some months have 28 days, some 30, some 31, and those differences distort comparisons when teams ask whether a project is late, whether inventory is aging too quickly, or whether revenue pacing is on target. A quarter-day counter removes part of that noise. On day 267, leaders can say with precision how far the organization has moved through the current quarter and how many days remain before the next reporting boundary.
Week alignment adds another layer. This date intersects ISO week 39, which means it participates in a separate reporting rhythm that many enterprises use for staffing, forecasting, and logistics. That dual identity matters. A day can simultaneously be the 267th day of the year, day 86 of Q3, and part of week 39. Strong analytics systems preserve all three identities because each supports a different type of decision: annual pacing, quarter management, and weekly execution.
There is also systems value in the timestamp. The UTC start-of-day Unix value for this page is 1790208000, which gives engineers a machine-stable boundary for joins, retention windows, SLA timers, and event bucketing. In data warehouses, Unix seconds avoid locale drift. In application logs, the ordinal date is often derived from that timestamp so analysts can group by day-of-year while still tracing back to the exact midnight boundary that opened the interval. The same logic is useful in manufacturing, where lot codes and quality records frequently need a compact representation of when a run started.
Day 267 also carries planning weight inside the month itself. September 24 typically lands in the 4th weekly block of September, during the autumn portion of the year. That positioning affects real workloads: demand curves shift, close calendars tighten or relax, and customer behavior changes with the season. The zodiac label of Libra is culturally secondary, but it still appears in consumer-facing calendars and publishing tools, which means some content systems use it as a metadata layer for audience segmentation or editorial packaging.
Finally, the strategic value of day 267 comes from what remains. After this point there are 98 days left in 2026. That remaining-day count is what turns an ordinal marker into a planning instrument. It lets teams model runway, compress schedules, calculate burn against a fixed denominator, and communicate urgency with a number that everybody can verify. That is why ordinal dates endure in technical environments: day 267 is not just a label for September 24; it is a compact control surface for the whole year.
ISO Precision
Is this the Julian Date?
Many engineers, manufacturers, and logistics teams casually call a value like 2026-131 a "Julian date," but ISO 8601 uses a more precise term: ordinal date. In ISO notation, the structure is YYYY-DDD, where DDD is the sequential day number inside the calendar year. A true Julian Date is something different. In astronomy, Julian Date is a continuous day count that starts from a distant historical epoch and usually includes fractional days so calculations can track exact elapsed time across centuries. That system is excellent for orbital mechanics and scientific timing, but it is not what a warehouse label, ERP export, or batch code usually means. When a production line prints 2026-131, it is almost always referring to the 131st day of 2026, not to the astronomical Julian Date scale. Using the ISO term matters because it reduces ambiguity between business software, scientific datasets, and compliance documents. It also matches how standards-based parsers and technical documentation describe the format. In short: the common industry nickname is widespread, but the standards-correct label for this page is ordinal date.
For a separate Julian Date resource, see juliandatetoday.com.
Quarterly Context
Q3 financial cycle context
Day 267 falls in Q3, day 86 of the quarter. This section of the year tends to concentrate reforecasting, second-half prioritization, and operational compression before year-end programs harden. Ordinal dates become useful in analytics because they map cleanly into rolling windows and production schedules.
Q3 is the compression quarter. Organizations often adjust second-half priorities, prepare year-end programs, and manage operational risk before Q4 deadlines become non-negotiable.
Historical Significance
On September 24
- 1890: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints officially renounces polygamy.
- 1996: Representatives of 71 nations sign the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty at the United Nations.
- 2023: NASA's OSIRIS-REx capsule containing samples from the asteroid 101955 Bennu successfully lands back on Earth.