Skip to content
Free Excel Tutorials
  • Home
  • Excel For Beginners
  • Excel Intermediate
  • Advanced Excel For Experts

Data Analysis

  • Conditional Formatting Rules in Excel
  • How To Compare Two Lists in Excel
  • Calculate Conditional Percentile ‘IF’ in table in Excel
  • How To Load Analysis ToolPak in Excel
  • Number and Text Filters Examples in Excel

References

  • To count total rows in a range in Excel
  • How to get last row in mixed data with blanks in Excel
  • Lookup entire row in Excel
  • How to retrieve first match between two ranges in Excel
  • Left Lookup in Excel

Data Validations

  • Excel Data validation whole percentage only
  • How To Create Drop-down List in Excel
  • Prevent invalid data entering in specific cells
  • Excel Data validation allow weekday only
  • Excel Data validation with conditional list

Next biweekly payday from date in Excel

by

To get the next payday – assuming a biweekly schedule, with paydays on Friday – you can use a formula based on the CEILING function.

 Formula

=CEILING(date+1,14)-1

Explanation

In the example shown, the formula in C6 is:

=CEILING(B6+1,14)-1

Note: this formula assumes Excel’s default 1900 date system.

How this formula works

This formula depends on the CEILING function, which rounds numbers up to a given multiple. It works because how dates work in Excel’s default 1900 date system, where the first day in the system is the number 1, equal to the date Sunday January 1, 1900.

In this scheme, the first Friday is day number 6, the second Friday is day number 13, and day 14 is the second Saturday. What this means is that all second Saturday’s in the future are evenly divisible by 14.

The formula uses this fact to figure out 2nd Saturdays, then subtracts 1 to get the Friday previous.

The other every other Friday

If you need to get the alternate Friday in an every other Friday scheme, you can use this version of the formula:

=CEILING(A1+8,14)-8

The idea is the same, but the formula needs to roll forward  8 days to get to an even multiple of 14. Once CEILING returns a date, 8 days are subtracted to move back to the Friday previous.

Post navigation

Previous Post:

DECIMAL function: Description, Usage, Syntax, Examples and Explanation

Next Post:

AVERAGE function: Description, Usage, Syntax, Examples and Explanation

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Learn Basic Excel

Ribbon
Workbook
Worksheets
Format Cells
Find & Select
Sort & Filter
Templates
Print
Share
Protect
Keyboard Shortcuts

Categories

  • Charts
  • Data Analysis
  • Data Validation
  • Excel Functions
    • Cube Functions
    • Database Functions
    • Date and Time Functions
    • Engineering Functions
    • Financial Functions
    • Information Functions
    • Logical Functions
    • Lookup and Reference Functions
    • Math and Trig Functions
    • Statistical Functions
    • Text Functions
    • Web Functions
  • Excel VBA
  • Excel Video Tutorials
  • Formatting
  • Grouping
  • Others

Logical Functions

  • How to use Excel OR Function
  • Complete List of Excel Logical Functions, References and Examples
  • AND function: Description, Usage, Syntax, Examples and Explanation
  • IFS function: Description, Usage, Syntax, Examples and Explanation
  • OR function Examples in Excel

Date Time

  • Count times in a specific range in Excel
  • How to calculate Quarter of Date in Excel
  • How to get same date next month or previous month in Excel
  • How to calculate future date say 6 months ahead in Excel
  • Get last working day in month in Excel

Grouping

  • Map text to numbers in Excel
  • Group times into 3 hour buckets in Excel
  • Group arbitrary text values in Excel
  • Map inputs to arbitrary values in Excel
  • Group times into unequal buckets in Excel

General

  • Delete Blank Rows at Once in Excel
  • How to fill cell ranges with random text values in Excel
  • Basic numeric sort formula in Excel
  • How to calculate percent sold in Excel
  • How to calculate percent variance in Excel
© 2026 xlsoffice . All Right Reserved. | Teal Smiles | Abbreviations And Their Meaning