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Leaping years in a single bound: Why February 29 is celebrated as Superman’s birthday

Leap Day is often celebrated as the Man of Steel's birthdate, and the reason why is pretty great. Read more about the fun history behind Clark Kent's birthday below. Happy almost, sort-of, kind-of-maybe, birthday, Superman!

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And Illustration by Jerry Ordway and John Byrne done for TIME Magazine's 1988 issue celebrating Superman's 50th Anniversary. Photo courtesy of DC and Time

Superman’s date of birth has fallen into several different brackets on the calendar over his colorfully clad career as a crime fighter, but only one has been officially celebrated by DC Comics in recent years.

Almost every four years the Georgian calendar, which is the internationally recognized timetable used across the planet, receives its necessary realignment in the form of a leap year.

To achieve this, an extra day is supplementary added to the month of February. That extra day is today, Feb. 29.

Also Happy Birthday to Shazam! (Formerly known as Captain Marvel). An excerpt from DC Comics’ 1976 “Super Calendar.” Photo courtesy DC Comics

Feb. 29 was concretely ordained as Clark Kent’s birthday in a 1976 edition of DC Comics’ “Super Calendar.”

The calendar listed a number of historic occasions and established birthdays for numerous characters, including our very own Lois Lane, who celebrates her birthday on August 17.

The date was popularized in the story “For the Man Who has Everything” that appeared in the 1985 “Superman Annual” no. 11.

The story was later adapted for “Justice League: Unlimited” in an episode that shared the same title.

In the story, Wonder Woman and Batman come to Superman’s Fortress of solitude to celebrate the Metropolis Marvel’s big day just to find him incapacitated at the hands of Mongul.

Why is February 29 recognized as Superman’s birthday?

DC’s reasoning for establishing Superman’s birthday on a leap day is somewhat laughable. In comic book letter columns DC editors explained that Superman remained “eternally youthful.”

Their decision to establish this date as Superman’s date of birth was because it only appears almost every four years. In other words, it was a way to explain why Superman is still “young” after appearing in comics for generations.

Of course this is ridiculous because the aging process doesn’t decelerate just because your birthdate doesn’t always appear on a calendar.

In later years Superman’s power source, the sun, was used as a more acceptable explanation for the Man of Steel’s stunted aging process.

When DC celebrated Superman’s 50th anniversary in 1988, they reestablished Feb. 29 as the Man of Steel’s birth date. TIME Magazine’s cover-story from March 14, 1988 commemorated the 50th anniversary with art by John Byrne.

Other dates recognized for Superman’s birthday

With characters like the Flash running back in time and altering history, or cataclysmic multiversal crisis’ happening on a regular basis, the historic backgrounds of the DC Universe are constantly in a state of flux.

Being the character that started it all, Superman’s date of birth has bounced from place to place faster than a speeding bullet.

From “World’s Finest Comics” no. 235, published Jan. 1976. Art by Dick Dillin. Photo courtesy of DC Comics

One established date is April 18, the date the epic “Action Comic’s no. 1” was released to newsstands in 1938. This date was recognized in the 2016 miniseries, “Superman: American Alien.”

Another established day is Dec. 1. This was sanctioned in the 2009-2010 post “Flashpoint” miniseries “Superman: Secret Origin.”

Another accepted day is June 18. This was the date that Clark Kent’s adoptive parents, Jonathan and Martha, found Krypton’s last son in a spaceship that crashed in the small Kansas based town of Smallville.


This story was adapted from a previous story published by the Daily Planet in 2020.

Zack Benz

Zack Benz has been a fan of the Daily Planet since he was eight years old. The Daily Planet has always been a beacon of hope for him and it’s his life’s mission to make it shine in a similar light to so many around the world. Zack graduated with a degree in journalism and art from the University of Minnesota Duluth in 2019.

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