About this collection
Monthly calendars give you the wide view: birthdays, paydays, school breaks, deadlines, doctor appointments. They are not where you plan your tomorrow; they are where you make sure you do not forget the third Wednesday of next month.
Most printables in this collection are blank-grid templates — meaning the month name, year, and day numbers can be written in by hand — so a single download covers any month of any year.
Further reading: a longer essay on building a personal planning system that pairs well with this collection.
We deliberately design these as undated grids rather than dated month-by-month sheets so a single printout serves any month of any year, including the months when February has 29 days and the years when the calendar drifts. The grids come in two main shapes: a 5-row grid for months that fit neatly into 35 days, and a 6-row grid for months that need 42. Every variant is published in landscape orientation (better for fridges and bulletin boards) and portrait orientation (better for binders and planner pockets), with both Sunday-start and Monday-start week layouts.
Inside each calendar we leave a small but useful sidebar — usually a three-item focus-of-the-month area, a holidays-and-birthdays list, and a few lines for monthly notes — because a calendar without those small bits of context becomes a wall of grid lines that no one looks at twice. The blank backside is intentional: many people print on both sides and use the backside for a monthly review ("what worked, what to change, what to remember") which is one of the most reliably useful planning rituals we have come across.
The most common use case for these printables is the family fridge calendar. Print one in landscape, write in birthdays and school events, hang it with a magnet, and you have a household calendar everyone can see. The second-most-common use is as a bullet-journal monthly log; the 6-row Monday-start portrait variant slides cleanly into an A5 notebook with a small margin to spare.
What's typically inside a monthly calendar printable
- A full 5-row or 6-row month grid
- A header for month name and year
- A weekly notes column on the side
- A small focus-of-the-month area
- A holidays and birthdays sidebar
- A blank backside for monthly review
How to choose the right one
Pick a landscape grid for a refrigerator or bulletin board, and a portrait grid if it goes inside a binder or planner. Choose Sunday-start for most family calendars and Monday-start for school or work calendars.
A note on the underlying practice
A calendar is a system of organizing days. This is done by giving names to periods of time, typically days, weeks, months and years. A date is the designation of a single and specific day within such a system. A calendar is also a physical record of such a system. A calendar can also mean a list of planned events, such as a court calendar, or a partly or fully chronological list of documents, such as a calendar of wills.
Background context drawn from open Wikipedia summaries; the printables themselves are the editorial work of the PlannerNest team.
Related: a deeper guide to the methodology behind these printables.