Italian Phrase
Oggi è il 3 luglio.
Meaning
This sentence is the standard way to state the current date in Italian. It follows a simple subject-verb-complement structure where the complement includes a definite article and a cardinal number.
When to use
This phrase is used in daily conversation to identify the date. It is appropriate for both casual chats and formal business contexts.
✦Grammar Breakdown
Oggièil3luglio
Oggi
An adverb meaning 'today', commonly used at the start of sentences to provide temporal context.
Il + Numero
Italian dates require the definite article 'il' followed by a cardinal number, except for the first of the month.
🗨In Conversation
Che giorno è oggi?
What day is today?
Oggi è il 3 luglio.
Today is July 3rd.
✕Common Mistakes
Oggi è 3 luglio.
In Italian, you must include the definite article 'il' before the number when stating the date.
Oggi è il terzo luglio.
Only the first day of the month uses an ordinal number (primo); all other days use cardinal numbers like 'tre'.
↔Alternatives
Siamo al 3 luglio.
We are at July 3rd.
Oggi ne abbiamo tre.
Today we have three (referring to the date).
Cultural Tip
Italians write dates in the Day/Month/Year format, so July 3rd is written as 03/07. Additionally, months like 'luglio' are not capitalized in Italian unless they start a sentence.

