The colloquial expression is 'have a meeting on' as in:
He: " A few of us in Accounting are arranging to go out for lunch. Would you like to join us?
She: "Love to - any day but Thursday. I have a monthly Managers' meeting on Thursday."
'have a meeting on Monday/tomorrow/next week'
Using it in the future tense, it sounds 'odd', 'forced', so avoid it:
"The boss is not happy with the sales figures and wants to talk to heads of section, so it looks like we'll have a meeting on tomorrow. Don't make plans for getting away from work early!"
Better to use 'will arrange' or 'meeting will be arranged'