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Father’s Day 2025: History, significance and who you can celebrate the day with 

Father’s Day may not be as fancy as Mother’s Day, but it’s gently carving its place. The day honours not just dads, but all men who lead with quiet strength and care, be it a grandad, mentor or father figure. Uncover the date, history and significance of this day.

June 13, 2025 / 11:32 IST
Father's Day 2025: From quiet role models to everyday heroes, Father’s Day celebrates the men who guide, support and simply show up (Images: Canva)

Father's Day 2025: From quiet role models to everyday heroes, Father’s Day celebrates the men who guide, support and simply show up (Images: Canva)

Father’s Day is gradually getting louder. It may not come with parades or poetry, but it is finding its place in the supermarket aisles and on the Internet. Every year the third Sunday of June is celebrated as Father’s Day. The day is marked to honour not just fathers, but fatherhood.

Father’s Day date, and why it matters:

Father’s Day is celebrated every third Sunday of June in many parts of the world, including the UK, India, Australia, and the US. This year, it falls on Sunday, 15 June.

Also read | Father's Day 2025: Origin, meaning and other surprising facts

Father’s Day is gradually carving out a space of its own in the calendar of celebrations. It might not come wrapped in as many florals or breakfast-in-bed photos as Mother’s Day just yet, but there's a quiet buzz that gets louder each year. More people are taking a moment to appreciate the fathers and father figures whose love may not always be loud, but is deeply felt. It’s a day that’s beginning to feel properly seen.

Father’s Day history and significance:

The story of Father’s Day traces back to the early 1900s in the United States. A woman named Sonora Smart Dodd felt her father, who had raised six children on his own after her mother passed away, deserved the same kind of recognition that mothers were starting to receive. She proposed the idea of a day to honour fathers, and in 1910, the first Father’s Day was celebrated in Spokane, Washington.

What began as a daughter’s tribute, gradually picked up support across states and countries. While it took decades to become an officially recognised occasion, the idea resonated, men who held families together, often quietly, now had a day dedicated to them.

Also read | Father’s Day special: Embarking on your paternal journey? Here’s a financial planning checklist

The celebration today:

Unlike Mother’s Day, which often carries a certain cultural script, Father’s Day is still evolving. It’s more flexible, more personal. For some, it’s a phone call; for others, a barbecue, a shared joke, or just a quiet hour on the sofa. There’s no one way to do it, but the common thread is recognition.

It’s about saying: we see the things you did without being asked, the love tucked inside advice, the sacrifices that looked ordinary but weren’t. And finally giving them the credit they so rarely seek, but always deserve. Today, it’s not just for dads by birth, but for anyone who’s filled those shoes with care, stepfathers, grandads, adoptive dads, big brothers, even neighbours or mentors.

More than biology:

Not every dad is a father by blood. Some step in, some step up, and some never step out; mentors, grandfathers, uncles, big brothers. Father’s Day isn’t boxed into a DNA kit. It’s a tribute to those who stood steady when life wobbled. Those who stitched broken toys, sat through school plays with teary eyes, or taught you how to fix a tap at 11pm when the house was leaking and so were you.

Namita S Kalla is a senior journalist who writes about different aspects of modern life that include lifestyle, health, fashion, beauty, and entertainment.
first published: Jun 13, 2025 11:32 am

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