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When Is the First Day of Spring 2025? 12 Facts About the Spring Equinox

Updated on Jan. 29, 2025

When is the first day of spring, and what is the spring equinox? Here's the scoop, plus fun facts about spring.

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When is the first day of spring?

So long, winter! The first day of spring is almost upon us, and we’re counting down the days until the weather begins to warm. The spring equinox happens on March 20, 2025, at 5:01 a.m. EDT. During this time, the sun crosses the celestial equator (aka an imaginary line above Earth’s equator), causing the Northern and Southern hemispheres to receive equal amounts of sunlight.

What does this mean, exactly? Well, apart from the fact that it’s the official start of spring, it’s also the perfect time for inspirational spring quotes and the rejuvenating feeling of renewal and new beginnings.

While setting goals for the warmer season ahead, take the time to learn about the spring equinox. Below, we’re sharing some of the most interesting facts about the first day of spring, from shocking spring celebrations and myths to scientific and spiritual facts you might not have known. So after you share your collection of spring jokes (we know you’ve been waiting for a giggle!), read on to learn all about the first day of spring.

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12 Facts About The Spring Equinox
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The spring equinox has other names

In the Northern Hemisphere, the spring equinox is also referred to as the March equinox and the vernal equinox. Stumped by that last one? It makes sense when you consider the word’s origin: Vernal means “spring” in Latin.

Sunset In Orbit
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The word equinox has an interesting meaning

Equinox comes from the Latin words for “equal” and “night.” As the sun crosses the equator (Earth’s midline), the hours of daylight and nighttime are very nearly equal. The equinoxes are the only times when the sun rises directly due east and sets directly due west for everyone on Earth.

El Castillo Chichen Itza Against Sky
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There’s a first day of spring celebration involving an ancient serpent god

In Mexico, in the ruins of the Mayan city Chichén Itzá, crowds gather at the ancient El Castillo pyramid every spring and fall equinox to witness an equinox celebration that dates back to the construction of the pyramid around A.D. 1000. The Maya were skilled astronomers, and the pyramid is dedicated to the feathered serpent god Quetzalcoatl. At sunset on the equinoxes, the angle of the sun creates shadows that look like a giant snake. The light-and-shadow snake appears to slither down the pyramid steps until it merges with the huge sculpted serpent’s head at the bottom.

earthworms in the dirt during springtime
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There’s a “worm moon” in March

The first day of spring is thought to bring renewal and new growth. From the first crocuses and snowdrops emerging to the daffodils and tulips, the new season is what the spring equinox is all about. March showers may bring April and May flowers, but they also bring worms up and out of the soil. Earthworms typically spend the winter buried deep below the frost line, but the annual spring showers reduce the oxygen in the soil and cause them to make their way up to the surface. That’s why the first full moon in the month of March is known as the worm moon.

Brown chicken egg stands on wooden table on white background.
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There’s a mysterious spring equinox tradition involving eggs

The spring equinox isn’t just the first day of spring—some people believe it’s a day of magic too. Folklore claims that special magnetic or energetic changes on the day of the vernal equinox make it possible to stand a raw egg on its end. As cool as this sounds, it’s a myth. You can balance some raw eggs on their end, but you can do this at any time of year.

According to the Washington Post, this egg story may stem from Chinese Lunar New Year traditions that have their roots in the Shang Dynasty, which ruled China for nearly six centuries. Legend has it that on the vernal equinox in the year 1600 B.C., a woman named Chien-Ti received a special egg from a heavenly swallow. In a story that bears similarities to Jesus’s birth in Christianity, the virgin Chien-Ti became pregnant. Her child, Hsieh, went on to found the Shang dynasty, and the tale is how the family explained its divine right to rule.

Cult of Cybele by Mercury, illustration
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The Cybele cult celebrated the spring equinox

For a certain group of ancient Romans, the vernal equinox was a day to celebrate the deity Cybele, a goddess closely associated with nature and fertility. A cult sprang up around her, and her festival was similar to rituals surrounding Dionysus, the god of wine: There were wild parties, dancing, drinking and sex. Cybele’s festival also included a ritual reminiscent of the Christmas tree, in which celebrants would cut down a pine tree, bring it to her shrine, decorate it with flowers and worship it as a representative of the goddess.

In another interesting twist, Cybele’s priests, the Galli, were self-made eunuchs who grew their hair long and dressed as females. During Cybele’s festival, they joined in the religious fervor until they collapsed.

mars planet in space
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Other planets have equinoxes too

We’re not the only planet that gets to experience an equinox (whether it’s the spring or fall equinox). In fact, every planet in the solar system has an equinox, which occurs when the planet’s orbit and tilt, with respect to the sun, result in both hemispheres receiving about the same amount of light.

Misty Cemetery during sunset
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There’s a myth that a gateway to hell opens during the spring equinox

In a cemetery on Emanuel Hill in the tiny town of Stull, Kansas, lies a so-called gateway to hell, author Mark Moran writes in Weird U.S.: Your Travel Guide to America’s Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets. Legend has it that this gateway is one of several places around the world where the devil himself can enter the human world. He can only do it twice a year, and one of those days is the vernal equinox. (The other is Halloween, naturally.)

Since the 1970s, people visiting the cemetery on these days report hearing disembodied growling, being grabbed by unseen arms and experiencing amnesia. Maybe stay away from Stull in the spring and fall.

In the hands of water flows from the source
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There’s a myth involving poisoned waters during the spring equinox

There are plenty of myths about the first day of spring. In fact, there’s a claim in ancient Judaic mythology that the water in springs and rivers becomes unsafe to drink during the vernal and autumnal equinoxes (and during the winter and summer solstices too), reports the Times of Israel. The solstices and equinoxes were considered spiritually vulnerable times, when warring supernatural powers might release cosmic poisons into the water.

A 12th-century scholar wrote, “The venom falls into the springs and aquifers whose waters flow to the valleys and hills, into every pool of water on the face of the Earth and into the waters inside wooden and stone vessels. The waters will kill all who drink from them at this hour.”

We probably don’t have to tell you this, but here it goes: Water doesn’t actually turn poisonous on the equinoxes.

High angle view of colorful easter eggs on a meadow
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We use the spring equinox to determine the date of Easter

Unlike the date of Christmas or Independence Day, the exact date of Easter changes from year to year. Deciding what day Easter will fall on is a matter of great importance to Christian churches because it celebrates the resurrection of Jesus Christ. It’s so important, according to Panos Antsaklis, PhD, a professor at Notre Dame University, that in the fourth century A.D., a group of Christian leaders came together to officially decide how to calculate Easter’s date. Their decision: Easter would be celebrated on the first Sunday after the first full moon following the vernal equinox.

River Nith Tidal bore
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Powerful river waves appear during the spring equinox

Waves large and powerful enough to surf on typically occur only in oceans or massive lakes. But during extreme tides—usually after a new or full moon—waves known as tidal bores can pop up in rivers. The biggest and most surfable tidal bores take place during the spring and autumnal equinoxes.

One notable example occurs in a river estuary near Gloucestershire, England. Called the Severn Bore, the wave rolls through every morning for two or three days around the equinox, and surfers from around the world gather to ride it.

Tabletop with Haft-seen elements for Nowruz
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The spring equinox correlates with the Persian New Year

The Persian new-year celebration known as Nowruz kicks off on the vernal equinox and lasts for 13 days. On the night of the equinox, Iranian families gather for a holiday meal and count down to the first stroke of their new year with a cheer of “Eide Shoma Mobarak,” or “Happy New Year!” The holiday table, called the haft seen, is decorated with seven ceremonial items: an apple representing beauty, vinegar for patience, hyacinth for spring, a sweet pudding for fertility, sprouts representing rebirth and coins for prosperity.

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