President Donald Trump has issued a holiday directive granting federal employees a full day off on Christmas Eve (December 24) and Boxing Day (December 26). The move effectively creates an extended federal holiday window around Christmas Day and immediately impacts how parts of the U.S. financial and housing system operate during the final week of the year.
At first glance, it sounds simple—time off for federal workers. In practice, however, this decision ripples through banks, mortgage lenders, funding operations, and settlement timelines nationwide.
Here’s what it really means.
What Exactly Did Trump Do?
The president authorized all federal departments and agencies to close on:
- Tuesday, December 24 (Christmas Eve)
- Thursday, December 26 (Boxing Day)
Since Christmas Day (December 25) is already a federal holiday, this effectively creates a three-day federal shutdown window midweek. While not unprecedented, it is broader than most prior holiday closures because it applies government-wide rather than selectively.
Are Banks Closed?
Short answer:
Mostly open, but slower.
- Retail banks (Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, etc.) typically follow the Federal Reserve holiday calendar, not presidential directives.
- Christmas Day remains the only guaranteed bank holiday that week.
- However, back-office operations, wire desks, compliance teams, and government-facing functions may be understaffed or paused.
Bottom line: Branches may be open on 12/24 and 12/26, but processing speed matters more than the doors being unlocked.
Impact on Mortgage Companies
This is where the effect becomes very real.
1.
Underwriting & Government Loan Programs
Federal closures directly impact:
- FHA
- VA
- USDA
- HUD-related approvals
If federal staff aren’t working:
- Case numbers may not be issued
- Final approvals may stall
- Conditions tied to federal databases can’t be cleared
Even conventional loans can feel the slowdown if third-party verifications touch federal systems.
2.
Funding & Warehouse Lines
Mortgage funding depends on:
- Wire transfers
- Custodial banks
- Compliance checks
- Post-close reviews
With federal offices closed and some banks operating at reduced capacity:
- Same-day funding can be delayed
- Wires may push to the next business day
- End-of-year funding cutoffs tighten
For lenders trying to close before December 31, this is not trivial.
What About Loan Closings?
Closings can still happen, but:
- Recording offices in many counties align with federal holidays
- Title companies may run skeleton crews
- Final disbursements could lag
This creates a situation where loans technically close, but money doesn’t move until the following business day—or even into the new year.
Why This Matters for the Market
December is already compressed:
- Year-end accounting
- Rate locks expiring
- Bonus-driven volume pushes
- Compliance deadlines
Removing two federal workdays adds friction to an already tight timeline.
For lenders and borrowers alike, the takeaway is simple:
Plan earlier, expect delays, and don’t assume “open” means “operational.”
The Bigger Picture
Beyond logistics, the decision sends a clear cultural signal. Trump has long emphasized federal workforce morale, public visibility, and symbolic gestures. Granting time off around Christmas reinforces that message while also acknowledging the reality that productivity during that week is historically low.
For businesses tied to federal systems, though, symbolism meets operational reality.
Final Take
- Federal employees: Enjoy the extended holiday.
- Banks: Open, but slower.
- Mortgage companies: Expect delays in underwriting, funding, and approvals.
- Borrowers: Earlier is better. Waiting until the last week of December just got riskier.
In a year where timing matters more than ever, two extra days off can move a lot of money—and a lot of expectations—into January.