Indian National Calendar 2030
Indian Calendar 2030
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India · 12 lunar months
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
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2030 includes 287 festivals and observances in the Indian calendar. Major celebrations include Republic Day, Holi, Independence Day, Sharad Navratri, Dussehra. New to the Vedic calendar? See how it works.
January
JAN26
Republic Day
Major
JAN31
Goddess Kali
Vrats & fasting days
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
Other fasts
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
AUG4
Naga (Serpent deities)
AUG5
Lord Vishnu (Kalki avatar)
AUG9
Lord Krishna, Radha
AUG13
Goddess Gayatri
AUG15
Independence Day
Major
AUG18
Naga (Serpent deities)
AUG18
Manasa, Naga (Serpent deities)
AUG21
Lord Krishna
AUG31
Lord Vishnu (Varaha avatar)
Vrats & fasting days
Ekadashi
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
September
SEP1
Lord Ganesha
SEP3
Lord Balarama
SEP4
Goddess Gauri (Mahalakshmi)
SEP5
Radha
SEP5
Goddess Gauri (Mahalakshmi)
SEP6
Goddess Gauri (Mahalakshmi)
SEP9
Lord Vishnu (Vamana avatar)
SEP10
Lord Vishnu, Lord Ganesha
SEP28
Sharad Navratri
Major
Goddess Durga
Vrats & fasting days
Ekadashi
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
Amavasya
October
OCT2
Goddess Durga
OCT3
Goddess Saraswati
OCT3
Goddess Durga
OCT4
Goddess Durga
OCT4
Goddess Saraswati
OCT5
Goddess Durga
OCT5
Goddess Saraswati
OCT5
Goddess Saraswati
OCT5
Goddess Durga
OCT6
Goddess Durga
OCT10
Goddess Lakshmi, Lord Krishna
OCT25
Lord Krishna
OCT25
Lord Hanuman
OCT26
Goddess Lakshmi, Goddess Sharda
OCT27
Lord Krishna
OCT28
Yama, Yamuna
Vrats & fasting days
Ekadashi
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
November
NOV1
Surya (Sun God), Chhathi Maiya
NOV1
Sant Jalaram Bapa
NOV3
Goddess Jagaddhatri
NOV4
Lord Krishna
NOV6
Tulsi, Lord Vishnu
NOV10
Lord Shiva
NOV10
Lord Krishna, Radha
NOV18
Kalabhairava (Shiva)
NOV29
Lord Rama, Goddess Sita
NOV30
Khandoba (Martand Bhairav)
Vrats & fasting days
Ekadashi
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
Amavasya
Other fasts
December
Vrats & fasting days
Ekadashi
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
Other fasts
Nothing selected — turn on at least one category above.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do Indian festival dates shift every Gregorian year?
Most major Indian festivals are determined by the lunar calendar — tithis (lunar days) and nakshatras — which runs about 11 days shorter than the Gregorian solar year. Each year, Diwali falls roughly 11 days earlier on the Gregorian calendar than it did the year before, corrected every two to three years by an extra intercalary month (Adhika Maasa or Adhika Masa) that brings the lunar calendar back in alignment with the seasons. This is why Diwali might be in late October one year and mid-November the next. Solar-anchored festivals — Makar Sankranti, Onam, Pongal — repeat within a day or two each year because they are tied to the Sun's position in a zodiac sign rather than the moon phase.
Which Indian festivals are fixed to the Gregorian calendar?
Festivals tied to the Sun's transit through a zodiac sign (sankranti) are solar-fixed and appear within one or two days of the same Gregorian date every year. The main ones: Makar Sankranti / Pongal / Uttarayan (January 14–15), Mesha Sankranti / Baisakhi / Puthandu / Vishu / Poila Baisakh (April 13–14), Karka Sankranti (July 15–16). Christmas (December 25) is Gregorian-fixed by definition. All other major festivals — Diwali, Holi, Navratri, Eid, Janmashtami, Ganesh Chaturthi, Durga Puja, Ekadashis — are lunar and shift 11 days per year.
Why does this page show festivals from multiple traditions?
India does not have a single unified festival calendar — Tamil families observe Pongal and Karthigai Deepam that are not major festivals elsewhere; Bengali families observe Durga Puja at a scale that is their defining cultural event; Gujarati families observe Navratri with regional specificity; Punjabi families mark Baisakhi as a harvest and new-year festival. Yet all of these communities also share Diwali, Holi, Navratri in some form, and Ekadashis. This Indian Calendar page takes the broadest view: all traditions' major festivals appear here. Tradition-specific detail is available on the Tamil, Bengali, Gujarati, and Hindu tradition pages.
What is Chaturmas and why does it matter for event planning?
Chaturmas ('four months') runs from Devshayani Ekadashi (Ashadha Shukla 11, typically late June or early July) to Devuthani Ekadashi (Kartika Shukla 11, typically October or November). During this period, most Hindu communities do not conduct vivah (weddings), upanayanam (sacred thread ceremony), griha pravesh (housewarming), or mundan (first haircut). The observance roughly coincides with the monsoon. The wedding season that opens immediately after Devuthani Ekadashi in November and runs through winter and spring is a direct result of this annual pause. Knowing Chaturmas dates is essential for any family scheduling a major auspicious event.
What are the major pan-Indian festival clusters worth planning around?
Spring cluster (March–May): Holi (Phalguna Purnima), Ram Navami (Chaitra Shukla 9), Akshaya Tritiya (Vaisakha Shukla 3), Hanuman Jayanti. Summer-monsoon: Guru Purnima (Ashadha Purnima), Naga Panchami, Raksha Bandhan (Shravana Purnima), Janmashtami (Bhadrapada Krishna 8). Autumn cluster (August–November): Ganesh Chaturthi (Bhadrapada Shukla 4), Pitru Paksha (15 days, no auspicious events), Navratri (9 days), Dussehra (Ashvina Shukla 10), Diwali (Kartika Amavasya), Bhai Dooj (Kartika Shukla 2). Winter: Makar Sankranti (January 14–15), Republic Day, then Basant Panchami (Magha Shukla 5) leading into the spring cluster again.
How accurate are the festival dates on this page?
Festival dates are calculated fresh each year from computed ephemeris data (Sun and Moon positions with the Lahiri ayanamsa). Tithi and nakshatra timings are referenced to the sunrise at your saved city. For a handful of festivals that depend on exact nakshatra or yoga timing (such as Janmashtami, which requires Rohini nakshatra at midnight), the calculation uses standard panchang rules. If your local temple panchang shows a different date, the difference is almost always due to a different reference city for sunrise — a one-day difference for a short tithi near a tithi boundary is common.