2026 in public domain

When a work's copyright expires, it enters the public domain. The following is a list of creators whose works entered the public domain in 2026 under common copyright regimes. Since laws vary globally, the copyright status of some works are not uniform.
Entering the public domain in countries with life + 50 years
[edit]In most countries of Africa and Asia, as well as Belarus, Bolivia, New Zealand and Uruguay; a work enters the public domain 50 years after the creator's death.
Entering the public domain in countries with life + 60 years
[edit]In Bangladesh, India, and Venezuela a work enters the public domain 60 years after the creator's death.
| Names | Country | Death | Occupation | Notable work |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ahn Eak-tai | 16 September 1965 | Composer | Aegukga, Symphonic Fantasy Korea | |
| Winston Churchill | 24 January 1965 | Prime Minister of the United Kingdom | The Second World War, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples | |
| Maria Dąbrowska | 19 May 1965 | Writer | ||
| T. S. Eliot | 4 January 1965 | Poet, Essayist, Playwright | Works | |
| Park Su-geun | 6 May 1965 | Painter | Woman Pounding Grain (절구질하는 여인), A Wash Place (빨래터), Old Tree and Woman (고목과 여인) | |
| Syngman Rhee | 19 July 1965 | President of South Korea | The Spirit of Independence (독립정신) | |
| Yoon Yong-ha | 23 July 1965 | Composer | Barley Field (보리밭), The Leaf Boat (나뭇잎 배), Gwangbokjeol song (광복절 노래) |
Entering the public domain in countries with life + 70 years
[edit]
With the exception of Belarus (Life + 50 years) and Spain (which has a copyright term of Life + 80 years for creators that died before 1987), a work enters the public domain in Europe 70 years after the creator's death, if it was published during the creator's lifetime. For previously unpublished material, those who publish it first will have the publication rights for 25 years. The same term applies in much of South America, and parts of western Africa. As such, the works of all authors who died in 1955 entered the European public domain in 2026.
2026 marks the first year since 2005 that works entered the public domain in Australia, which changed its copyright term length from a "plus 50" law to a "plus 70" law in 2004, as stated in Australia's own section below.
One of the most significant authors whose works entered the European public domain in 2026 is German writer Thomas Mann, whose novels (Buddenbrooks, Doctor Faustus, and others) are known for their high symbolism and their insight into the psychology of the artist and the intellectual. Other notable examples of authors whose works entered the public domain include French writer Léon Werth, Italian writer Guido Battelli, British writer Clemence Housman, American writers James Agee (the author of A Death in the Family) and Dale Carnegie (the author of How to Win Friends and Influence People), Space Lawyer author Nat Schachner, poets Wallace Stevens and Paul Claudel, Swiss composer Arthur Honegger, Italian composer Francesco Balilla Pratella, Russian composer Isaak Dunayevsky, "Charleston" writer James P. Johnson, American film director Lloyd Bacon and screenwriters William C. deMille and Robert Riskin, and French artists Yves Tanguy and Fernand Léger. The works of Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset also entered the public domain in European countries other than his native Spain. The publications of physicist Albert Einstein, physician Sir Alexander Fleming, mathematician Hermann Weyl, and economist Herbert Stanley Jevons additionally entered the public domain.
Entering the public domain in countries with life + 80 years
[edit]Spain has a copyright term of life + 80 years for creators that died before 1987. In Colombia and Equatorial Guinea, a work enters the public domain 80 years after the creator's death.
| Names | Country | Death | Occupation | Notable work |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fulgencio García | 4 March 1945 | Musician, composer | "La Gata Golosa" | |
| Andrés de Santa Maria | 29 April 1945 | Painter | En la Playa de Macuto | |
| Ignacio Zuloaga | 24 June 1945 | Painter |
Russia and Ukraine
[edit]Russia has a copyright term of life + 70 years in general, with two special provisions:
- extra 4 years for those who fought in or worked during the so-called Great Patriotic War (that is, the Eastern Front of World War II), and/or
- copyright term starting from the date of rehabilitation for unlawfully prosecuted and posthumously rehabilitated.
Ukraine also has a special provision that the copyright term starts from the date of rehabilitation for unlawfully prosecuted and posthumously rehabilitated, which applies only to authors who died in 1951 or later.
| Names | Country | Death | Occupation | Notable work |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vasily Mikhaylovich Alekseyev | 12 May 1951 | Sinologist, translator | Fox's Wiles | |
| Alexei Badayev | 11 March 1951 | Politician | How Bolshevik deputies fought in the State Duma | |
| Nikolay Brodskiy | 5 June 1951 | Literary scholar | Biographies of Pushkin and Lermontov | |
| Vladimir Kirshon | 28 July 1938 | Writer | Miraculous Alloy | |
| Georgii Nadson | 15 April 1939 | Biologist | Changements des caractères héréditaires, provoqués expérimentalement et la création de nouvelles races stables chez les levures | |
| Joseph Neman | 18 November 1952 | Aerospace engineer | Advanced ideas of Soviet aircraft designers | |
| Viktor Savin | 11 August 1943 | Writer | State Anthem of the Komi Republic | |
| Efim Shchadenko | 6 September 1951 | General | Donbass and its armed struggle | |
| Nikolai Vavilov | 26 January 1943 | Agronomist, geneticist | Origin and Geography of Cultivated Plants |
Australia
[edit]In 2004 copyright in Australia changed from a "plus 50" law to a "plus 70" law, in line with the United States and the European Union. But the change was not made retroactive (unlike the 1995 change in the European Union which brought some (British and possibly other) authors back into copyright, especially those who died from 1925 to 1944). Hence, the work of an author who died before 1955 is normally in the public domain in Australia; but the copyright of authors was extended to 70 years after death for those who died in 1955 or later. 2026 was the first year since 2005 that new Australian authors came out of copyright,[1] with those who died in 1955. Specific Australian authors whose works entered the public domain this year include writer Charles Shaw and artists John Radecki and Antonio Dattilo Rubbo.
Copyright for Australian newspaper content originally published in 1955 also expired on 1 January 2026, which now allows content from 1955 newspapers to be published on Trove, the National Library of Australia's online database.[2]
Canada
[edit]In 2022, copyright in Canada changed from a "plus 50" law to a "plus 70" law, in line with the United States and the European Union. But the change, like Australia's before it, was not made retroactive.[3][4] No more new Canadian authors will come out of copyright until 1 January 2043 (those who died in 1972). Crown copyright was not changed, thus any government works published in 1974 entered the public domain in 2025.[5]
United States
[edit]
Under the Copyright Term Extension Act, books published in 1930, films released in 1930, and other works published in 1930, entered the public domain in 2026.[6][7] Unpublished works whose authors died in 1955 also entered the public domain.[6]
The major works of literature that entered the public domain in 2026 are William Faulkner's novel As I Lay Dying, Dashiell Hammett's The Maltese Falcon as a complete novel, Agatha Christie's first Miss Marple novel The Murder at the Vicarage, the original edition of the first Nancy Drew mystery story The Secret of the Old Clock by pseudonymous author Carolyn Keene, the first Elson-Gray Readers books featuring Dick and Jane by William S. Gray, Noël Coward's play Private Lives, T. S. Eliot's poem "Ash Wednesday", Evelyn Waugh's novel Vile Bodies, John Dos Passos' novel The 42nd Parallel (the first book in his U.S.A. trilogy), Edna Ferber's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Cimarron, Dorothy L. Sayers' crime novel Strong Poison, J. B. Priestly's novel Angel Pavement, Olaf Stapledon's science fiction novel Last and First Men, Sigmund Freud's book Civilization and Its Discontents in its original German, W. Somerset Maugham's novel Cakes and Ale, Bertrand Russell's The Conquest of Happiness, and the children's books The Little Engine That Could by Watty Piper, Swallows and Amazons by Arthur Ransome, and The Cat Who Went to Heaven by Elizabeth Coatsworth.[8]
Other notable literary works of fiction that entered the public domain include Christie's other novels The Mysterious Mr. Quin and Giant's Bread (the latter of which she wrote pseudonymously as "Mary Westmacott"); The Documents in the Case co-written by Sayers and Robert Eustace; John Dickson Carr's first detective novel It Walks By Night; the mystery and crime novels Mystery Mile by Margery Allingham, The French Powder Mystery by Ellery Queen, Enter the Saint by Leslie Charteris, and The Door by Mary Roberts Rinehart; the original serialized version of Max Brand's Destry Rides Again; the dramas The Green Pastures by Marc Connelly, Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny and The Decision by Bertolt Brecht (the former co-written with Kurt Weill) in their original German, The Human Voice by Jean Cocteau in its original French, and The Barretts of Wimpole Street by Rudolf Besier; the children's books The Tale of Little Pig Robinson by Beatrix Potter and The Yellow Knight of Oz by Ruth Plumly Thompson; Nancy Drew's next three stories The Hidden Staircase, The Bungalow Mystery, and The Mystery at Lilac Inn; The Hardy Boys' story The Great Airport Mystery; Hart Crane's long poem "The Bridge"; the Collected Poems of Robert Frost; W. H. Auden's first major poetry collection, simply called Poems;[9] and the first English translations of Franz Kafka's The Castle and Hermann Sudermann's The Excursion to Tilsit. Notable nonfiction entrants to the public domain include William Empson's Seven Types of Ambiguity (a foundational work of literary criticism), Ronald Fisher's The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection, The Lives of a Bengal Lancer by Francis Yeats-Brown, Memoirs of an Infantry Officer by Siegfried Sassoon, and The Mysterious Universe by James Jeans.[9] He Done Her Wrong, a wordless graphic novel by Milt Gross, also entered the public domain.
Notable films that entered the public domain in 2026 include the following:[8][9]
- Lewis Milestone's All Quiet on the Western Front, the third film to win the Best Picture and Best Director Academy Awards;
- Josef von Sternberg's The Blue Angel, starring Emil Jannings and Marlene Dietrich, which launched the latter to international stardom;
- Animal Crackers starring the Marx Brothers;
- the Laurel and Hardy comedy Another Fine Mess;
- Soup to Nuts featuring an early iteration of The Three Stooges;
- Anna Christie, Greta Garbo's first sound film;
- Hell's Angels, an aviation epic directed by Howard Hughes and starring Jean Harlow, which marked the actress' breakthrough;
- Morocco, also directed by Josef von Sternberg and starring Marlene Dietrich, which marked the Hollywood debut of Dietrich (who would go on to make five additional films with the director) and earned four Academy Award nominations;
- the French film L'Âge d'Or (The Golden Age), directed by Luis Buñuel, which entered the U.S. public domain after having been banned in its home country for nearly fifty years;
- George Hill's The Big House and Min and Bill, both starring Wallace Beery;
- Robert Z. Leonard's The Divorcee starring Norma Shearer, which won her the Academy Award for Best Actress;
- The Dawn Patrol, directed by Howard Hawks and starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr.;
- Alfred Hitchcock's films Juno and the Paycock and Murder!;
- The Big Trail, with John Wayne in his first starring role, which is an early example of a film produced in widescreen format;
- King of Jazz starring Paul Whiteman, which was Bing Crosby's film debut and one of the most notable examples of early talkies produced in two-strip Technicolor;
- Robert Siodmak's first film People on Sunday with its original German script, written by Billy Wilder;
- René Clair's Under the Roofs of Paris in its original French;
- G. W. Pabst's Westfront 1918 in its original German;
- John Ford's films Up the River and Born Reckless, the former of which was the feature-film debut for both Spencer Tracy and Humphrey Bogart;
- F. W. Murnau's third American film City Girl;
- Feet First starring Harold Lloyd;
- Journey's End, the directorial debut of James Whale;
- Frank Capra's film Ladies of Leisure;
- Ernst Lubitsch's film Monte Carlo, starring Jack Buchanan and Jeanette MacDonald;
- Lloyd Bacon's film A Notorious Affair with Billie Dove and Basil Rathbone;
- Roland West's film The Bat Whispers, an influential early horror film;
- Frank Borzage's film Liliom, the basis for the musical Carousel;
- Whoopee!, an early two-strip Technicolor film featuring Eddie Cantor;
- The Royal Family of Broadway, one of George Cukor's first films as a director;
- Cecil B. DeMille's film Madam Satan;
- the French film Prix de Beauté (Beauty Prize) starring Louise Brooks;
- Jack Conway's The Unholy Three, starring Lon Chaney in his only speaking role and released shortly before the actor's death;
- the Buster Keaton films Doughboys and Free and Easy (the latter of which gave him his first speaking role);
- King Vidor's Billy the Kid starring Beery and Johnny Mack Brown;
- Just Imagine, an early science fiction musical directed by David Butler;
- Manslaughter starring Claudette Colbert and Fredric March;
- Tod Browning's film Outside the Law starring Edward G. Robinson;
- The Big Pond starring Maurice Chevalier and Colbert;
- Lightnin' starring Will Rogers;
- War Nurse, a female-fronted World War I drama starring Anita Page;
- Laughter, directed by Harry d'Abbadie d'Arrast and starring March alongside Nancy Carroll, which was critically acclaimed in its own time but is now an overlooked gem among early sound films;
- Follow Thru, directed by Lloyd Corrigan and starring Carroll alongside Charles "Buddy" Rogers, one of the first all-Technicolor sound musicals to be preserved in full color;
- Niebezpieczny romans (Dangerous Romance), the first Polish sound film;
- Tonka of the Gallows, the first Czech sound film;
- The Song of Love, the first Italian sound film;
- Goodbye Argentina, the first Argentinian sound film; and
- the British drama The Man with the Flower in His Mouth, television's oldest broadcast (which is currently lost).
The 1931 films Little Caesar, directed by Mervyn LeRoy and starring Robinson as the titular gangster, and Cimarron, the adaptation of Ferber's novel and the year's Best Picture Academy Award winner, entered the public domain in 2026 instead of 2027 because they were released so early in the year that they carry 1930 copyright registrations instead.[10]

Dave Fleischer's cartoons Dizzy Dishes and Hot Dog, the respective debuts of Betty Boop and Bimbo, entered into the public domain. The 1930 Mickey Mouse cartoons entered the public domain this year as well, bringing with them the design of Pluto, who entered the public domain through his debut appearance in The Chain Gang (where he was an unnamed prison guard dog), and his second appearance as "Rover" (owned by Minnie Mouse) in The Picnic.[a] Also entering the public domain were the Disney studio's second year of Silly Symphony shorts, and an Ub Iwerks cartoon character created independently of Disney: Flip the Frog, whose debut film Fiddlesticks was the first sound cartoon in color. The initial week of the Mickey Mouse comic strip[b] and the first appearances of Chic Young's Blondie also entered the public domain,[c][8] as did Hergé's first Quick & Flupke comic strips and the full album version of his Tintin in the Land of the Soviets, the character's debut story, in its original French black-and-white version (accompanied by part of the serialized version of Tintin in the Congo).[9]
Notable popular songs that entered the public domain in 2026 include "Dream a Little Dream of Me", which spawned 400 recorded versions and was a signature song for Mama Cass; Johnny Green's song "Body and Soul", the most recorded jazz standard of all time; George and Ira Gershwin's songs "Embraceable You", "But Not for Me" and "I Got Rhythm", the last of which introduced the "rhythm changes" which became a foundational jazz chord progression; Hoagy Carmichael's song "Georgia on My Mind", which was Ray Charles' signature song and is the state song of Georgia; "Get Happy", the first hit from songwriter Harold Arlen; Jimmy McHugh's song "On the Sunny Side of the Street"; Cole Porter's song "Love for Sale"; Rodgers and Hart's songs "Ten Cents a Dance" and "Dancing on the Ceiling"; Walter Donaldson's songs "Little White Lies", "You're Driving Me Crazy", and "My Baby Just Cares for Me" (the last of which was made famous later by Nina Simone); Howard Dietz and Arthur Schwartz's song "Something to Remember You By"; "Fine and Dandy"; "Someday I'll Find You"; "Three Little Words"; "Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone"; "Sing, You Sinners"; "Cheerful Little Earful"; "Would You Like to Take a Walk?"; and "It Happened in Monterey". The first English translation of "Just a Gigolo" and John Philip Sousa's march The Royal Welch Fusiliers also entered the public domain. Some songs introduced in films became public domain as well: the entry of The Blue Angel brought along Dietrich's signature song "Falling in Love Again (Can't Help It)", that of Monte Carlo brought along the song "Beyond the Blue Horizon" as sung by MacDonald, and that of The Big Pond brought along the songs "Livin' in the Sunlight, Lovin' in the Moonlight" and "You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me".[8][9]
Sound recordings that were published in 1925 entered the public domain,[6] including Marian Anderson's recording of "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen"; the song "Saint Louis Blues" as recorded by Bessie Smith and Louis Armstrong; the first recordings of the songs "Yes Sir, That's My Baby", "Sweet Georgia Brown", "Fascinating Rhythm", "I'll See You in My Dreams", "Everybody Loves My Baby", "Manhattan",[8] "Remember", "If You Knew Susie", "Tea for Two", "Oh, How I Miss You Tonight", and "Dinah"; and the first recordings of the jazz standards "Davenport Blues" and "Indian Love Call".[9]
Among the well-known works of art entering the public domain were Piet Mondrian's painting Composition with Red, Blue and Yellow, Paul Klee's painting Animal Friendship, Sophie Tauber-Arp's Composition of Circles and Overlapping Angles, Theo van Doesburg's Simultaneous Counter-Composition, the design of the Jules Rimet Cup, Edward Steichen's photograph Fashion for Vogue,[8] Edward Weston's photograph Pepper No. 30, Martin Munkácsi's photograph Three Boys at Lake Tanganyika, and Ansel Adams' photobook Taos Pueblo. José Clemente Orozco's painting Prometheus and Grant Wood's painting American Gothic were already in the public domain; the former was published without a copyright notice, and the latter had a notice but was not renewed.[8]
Public Domain Day 2026 attracted the interest of such media outlets as NPR,[12] the Associated Press,[13] Smithsonian Magazine,[14] and the Los Angeles Times.[15]
See also
[edit]- List of American films of 1930
- 1930 in literature
- 1930 in music
- 1955 in literature and 1975 in literature for deaths of writers
- Public Domain Day
- Creative Commons
Notes
[edit]- ^ Mickey's ownership of the bloodhound character will not enter the public domain until 2027, through the short The Moose Hunt.
- ^ The rest of Mickey's comic strips from 1930 were not renewed properly; the same applies to his strips from later years up until 1935. Since Clarabelle Cow was introduced in the strip before debuting in animation in The Shindig, she was already in the public domain as a result of that.
- ^ In Young's first Blondie comics, the title character was a flapper, and Dagwood was the young heir to a railway company. Strips from 1935 where Dagwood's iconic sandwich debuted according to Duke University School of Law may have been renewed, but the idea of a character's fixation with food is often considered to be uncopyrightable, and the copyright status of the sandwich is a bit murky due to it also being used/parodied in various works, most notably the Scooby-Doo franchise of television cartoon shows. Furthermore, King Features Weekly was not started until May 4, 1933, and any subsequent strips beyond the first up to that date (including those where Dagwood and Blondie married) were not renewed and are undoubtedly in the public domain as well.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ "How long does copyright last?". National Library of Australia. Archived from the original on 20 December 2024. Retrieved 19 December 2024.
- ^ "Public Domain Day 2026". Trove. National Library of Australia. 2 January 2026. Retrieved 6 January 2026.
On 1 January 2026, copyright covering newspaper content published in 1955 will expire.
- ^ "An Act to implement certain provisions of the budget tabled in Parliament on April 7, 2022 and other measures". Parliament of Canada. 2022-06-23. Archived from the original on 2023-01-01. Retrieved 2022-11-28.
- ^ "PC Number: 2022-1219". Government of Canada. 2022-11-17. Archived from the original on 2022-11-28. Retrieved 2022-11-28.
- ^ "Crown Copyright - FAQ". Government of Canada. www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca. Archived from the original on 7 February 2024. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
- ^ a b c Hirtle, Peter B. (3 January 2020). "Copyright Term and the Public Domain in the United States". Cornell University Library Copyright Information Center. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
- ^ "Copyright and the Public Domain". Public Domain Information Project. Archived from the original on 2014-08-01. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
- ^ a b c d e f g Jenkins, Jennifer. "January 1, 2026 is Public Domain Day: Works from 1930 are open to all, as are sound recordings from 1925!". Duke University School of Law – Duke Center for the Study of the Public Domain.
- ^ a b c d e f Moss, Aaron (December 7, 2025). "Public Domain Day 2026 is Coming: Here's What to Know". Copyright Lately. Retrieved December 8, 2025.
- ^ Library of Congress. Copyright Office. (1958). Catalog of Copyright Entries, Third Series. Parts 12-13: Motion Pictures and Filmstrips Jan-Dec 1958: Vol 12 No 1-2. United States Copyright Office. U.S. Govt. Print. Off. The films' registrations are on pages 34 and 36 of the catalog.
- ^ "King Features Illustrated Weekly copyright information". onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu.
- ^ "Some of the cultural works entering the public domain in 2026". Morning Edition. NPR. January 1, 2026.
- ^ Dalton, Andrew (December 31, 2025). "Betty Boop and 'Blondie' enter the public domain in 2026, accompanied by a trio of detectives". AP News. Associated Press. Retrieved January 11, 2026.
- ^ Wexler, Ellen (December 31, 2025). "Happy Public Domain Day to All Who Celebrate! You Can Now Use Betty Boop, Nancy Drew and The Maltese Falcon for Free". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved January 11, 2026.
- ^ Hiltzik, Michael (December 30, 2025). "Blondie and Dagwood are entering the public domain, but Betty Boop still may be trapped in copyright jail". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 11, 2025.
External links
[edit]
Media related to Public Domain Day 2026 at Wikimedia Commons- "Authors by Year of Death – 1955". AuthorAndBookInfo.com.
- Popular Books of 1930 at Goodreads