It's not officially recognized as a national holiday, but in the past, it's felt that way for Aggie fans.
It's the day where high school athletes are putting pen to paper to tell folks where they'll be continuing their football career.
The Aggies have already made a huge play by grabbing five-star receiver Jerome Myles out of Corner Canyon, Utah.
All of that is fun and great for the program, but there's a unique shift that fans might start to be thinking about.
Low drama in signing day marks culture shift for Texas A&M football
There's no doubt Aggie fans are excited about what Myles can do in the near future for the program. His immediate impact is needed for juice at the position and better receiving depth overall.
The impact of the signing day is still a positive for the Aggies, but it doesn't come with the high drama that it once did from years past.
You'd have to go back about 10 years ago whenever Kyler Murray, the three-time state champion from Allen, Texas signed with the Aggies. The high stakes of that announcement was felt across the country, with Murray being one of the greatest high school quarterbacks of all-time.
He didn't see much playing time in College Station, and ended up developing his talents with Lincoln Riley at Oklahoma.
Other examples abound; Aggie fans were on pins and needles for Evan Stewart's signing, and he's now gone. But today, all the signatures were in by noon. That's quite the difference.
The shift is about more than just this day. It's about Mike Elko starting off fresh being apart of this day for the first time as an Aggie head coach and changing the culture of the team.
He's off to a fine start in his Aggie tenure, and with the core of the team staying in peace, the culture can only grow higher from here.
Signing day doesn't quite have the same tension it once did for Aggie fans, but fans should see that as a good thing.