The first Border Guards Day celebrations were marked on May 28, 1919, the first anniversary since the Border Troops were created as a directly reporting agency under the Cheka of Felix Dzerzhinsky, which was the one of the pioneer border protection forces in the modern world, in the midst of the Russian Civil War, the first celebrations were low key owing to the duties of the border guards in the conflict.
Although Border Guards Day is mainly celebrated in Russia, a number of former republics in the former USSR, have preserved and continue to celebrate this holiday on May 28. A number of other countries still celebrate the holiday on different dates.
Abkhazia
has recognized 28 May as Border Guards Day since its independence in 1991 and celebrates the holiday similarly to Russia.
Belarus
has recognized 28 May as Border Guards Day since its independence in 1991 and celebrates the holiday similarly to Russia. The border troops of both Belarus and Russia commonly hold joint parades during the holiday.
Kyrgyzstan
has recognized 28 May as Border Guards Day since its independence in 1991 and celebrates the holiday similarly to Russia. The date of the holiday was shifted to October 29 in 2003 by order of President Akayev, but was changed back to its original date 2 years later due to appeals veterans of the Soviet Border Troops and the Kyrgyz Frontier Force.
South Ossetia
has recognized 28 May as Border Guards Day since its independence in 1991 and celebrates the holiday similarly to Russia.
The holiday was established as a professional holiday in 1958, by order of the Council of Ministers of the USSR. Following the fall of the Fall of the Soviet Union, the status of the holiday was unclear due to the lack effort in the Russian government to make in an official holiday in the Russian Federation. President Boris Yeltsin signed a decree in 1994 officially making Border Guards Day a professional day off for the servicemen of the Border Service of the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation, which was founded 2 years earlier. Today, it is a celebration of more than 4 centuries of border protection and control in Russia, dating back to Prince Mikhail Ivanovich Vorotynsky's Zasechnaya cherta in the 16th century, an early prototype to the border checkpoints in operation today nationwide.
Tajikistan
has recognized 28 May as Border Guards Day since its independence in 1991 and celebrates the holiday similarly to Russia. 2014 celebrated the 20th anniversary since the establishment of the Tajik Border Troops. In honor of this anniversary, a military parade in central Dushanbe was held, with the commander of the Border Troops, Lieutenant General Rajabali Rahmonali and Commander of the Dushanbe Military Garrison, Major General Bakhtiyor Ruzmonshoev inspecting the more than 1,000 troops who participated in the parade.
In Azerbaijan, the Day of the Border Guard is celebrated on August 18, in order to honor the parliamentary decree signed on August 18, 1919, which outlined the borders of Azerbaijan and its protection. In 2000, Heydar Aliyev announced that August 18 was set to be the new holiday of the State Border Service.
Baltics
Although the Baltic republics of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania do not recognize May 28 as an holiday due to the Soviet occupation of the Baltic states in the past, a number of the Baltic Russians along with the shared number of Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians celebrate such holiday. On top of that, the border agencies of the three countries celebrate their own professional holidays throughout the year.
Latvia
The Day of the State Border Guard of Latvia has been celebrated on November 7 since 2015, marking the founding of the force in 1919.
Kazakhstan
In Kazakhstan, the Day of the Border Guard is celebrated on August 18. It became a professional holiday in 1992, and was included to the calendar of professional holidays in 2002.
In Ukraine, Border Guards Day has been celebrated on April 30 as an official holiday since 2018. After Ukraine gained its independence, the date of celebration was moved to November 4 by decree of President of Ukraine, Leonid Kravchuk. The new date however, did not take root, with border guards who served during the Soviet era recognizing May 28 as Border Guards Day. The holiday was moved back to its original in 2003, but was changed in 2018 to April 30 by order of President Petro Poroshenko as a result of his de-Russification policy following the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014. The date commemorates that during the Ukrainian War of IndependenceUkrainian troops established the border of the Ukrainian state in the settlement of Kovpaky on April 30, 1918.