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Bengali Year 2024

Bengali Festivals 2024

Columbus, Ohio, US · 12 lunar months
Columbus, Ohio, US Change
Ayanamsa
Time format
January View January →
  • Jan 7 Shat Tila Ekadashi Festival
  • Jan 9 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jan 9 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Jan 11 Amavasya Festival
  • Jan 15 Makar Sankranti Festival
  • Jan 15 Thai Pongal Festival
  • Jan 21 Pausha Putrada Ekadashi Festival
  • Jan 23 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jan 25 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Jan 26 Republic Day Festival
  • Jan 29 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Jan 30 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Jan 30 Sakat Chauth Festival
February View February →
  • Feb 6 Vijaya Ekadashi Festival
  • Feb 8 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Feb 8 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Feb 13 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Feb 13 Kumbha Sankranti Festival
  • Feb 14 Vasant Panchami Festival
  • Feb 16 Ratha Saptami Festival
  • Feb 17 Bhishma Ashtami Festival
  • Feb 20 Jaya Ekadashi Festival
  • Feb 22 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Feb 24 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Feb 28 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
March View March →
  • Mar 6 Papamochani Ekadashi Festival
  • Mar 8 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Mar 8 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Mar 8 Maha Shivaratri Festival
  • Mar 10 Amavasya Festival
  • Mar 13 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Mar 14 Meena Sankranti Festival
  • Mar 20 Amalaki Ekadashi Festival
  • Mar 22 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Mar 23 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Mar 24 Holika Dahan Festival
  • Mar 25 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Mar 25 Holi Festival
  • Mar 29 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
April · Boishakh View April →
  • Apr 2 Sheetala Ashtami Festival
  • Apr 5 Varuthini Ekadashi Festival
  • Apr 7 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Apr 7 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Apr 8 Amavasya Festival
  • Apr 9 Chaitra Navratri Festival
  • Apr 9 Ugadi Festival
  • Apr 9 Gudi Padwa Festival
  • Apr 11 Gangaur Festival
  • Apr 12 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Apr 14 Yamuna Chhath Festival
  • Apr 14 Mesha Sankranti Festival
  • Apr 17 Ram Navami Festival
  • Apr 17 Swaminarayan Jayanti Festival
  • Apr 19 Kamada Ekadashi Festival
  • Apr 21 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Apr 23 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Apr 23 Hanuman Jayanti Festival
  • Apr 28 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
May · Joishtho View May →
  • May 4 Apara Ekadashi Festival
  • May 6 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • May 6 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • May 8 Amavasya Festival
  • May 10 Akshaya Tritiya Festival
  • May 10 Parashurama Jayanti Festival
  • May 11 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • May 14 Ganga Saptami Festival
  • May 14 Vrishabha Sankranti Festival
  • May 17 Sita Navami Festival
  • May 19 Mohini Ekadashi Festival
  • May 21 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • May 21 Narasimha Jayanti Festival
  • May 23 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • May 23 Buddha Purnima Festival
  • May 24 Narada Jayanti Festival
  • May 27 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
June · Asharh View June →
  • Jun 2 Yogini Ekadashi Festival
  • Jun 4 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jun 4 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Jun 6 Amavasya Festival
  • Jun 6 Shani Jayanti Festival
  • Jun 6 Vat Savitri Vrat Festival
  • Jun 10 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Jun 15 Mithuna Sankranti Festival
  • Jun 16 Ganga Dussehra Festival
  • Jun 18 Nirjala Ekadashi Festival
  • Jun 20 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jun 22 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Jun 22 Vat Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Jun 25 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
July · Shrabon View July →
  • Jul 2 Kamika Ekadashi Festival
  • Jul 4 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jul 4 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Jul 5 Amavasya Festival
  • Jul 7 Jagannath Rathyatra Festival
  • Jul 10 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Jul 16 Karka Sankranti Festival
  • Jul 17 Devshayani Ekadashi Festival
  • Jul 19 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jul 21 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Jul 21 Guru Purnima Festival
  • Jul 31 Aja Ekadashi Festival
August · Bhadro View August →
  • Aug 2 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Aug 2 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Aug 4 Amavasya Festival
  • Aug 7 Hariyali Teej Festival
  • Aug 8 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Aug 9 Nag Panchami Festival
  • Aug 15 Independence Day Festival
  • Aug 16 Shravana Putrada Ekadashi Festival
  • Aug 17 Simha Sankranti Festival
  • Aug 19 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Aug 19 Raksha Bandhan Festival
  • Aug 19 Gayatri Jayanti Festival
  • Aug 22 Kajari Teej Festival
  • Aug 23 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Aug 26 Krishna Janmashtami Festival
  • Aug 29 Indira Ekadashi Festival
  • Aug 31 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
September · Bhadro View September →
  • Sep 1 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Sep 2 Amavasya Festival
  • Sep 3 Amavasya Festival
  • Sep 6 Hartalika Teej Festival
  • Sep 7 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Sep 7 Ganesh Chaturthi Festival
  • Sep 8 Rishi Panchami Festival
  • Sep 9 Balarama Jayanti Festival
  • Sep 11 Radha Ashtami Festival
  • Sep 14 Parsva Ekadashi Festival
  • Sep 16 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Sep 17 Anant Chaturdashi Festival
  • Sep 17 Kanya Sankranti Festival
  • Sep 18 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Sep 18 Pitrupaksha Festival
  • Sep 21 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Sep 28 Rama Ekadashi Festival
  • Sep 30 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Sep 30 Masik Shivaratri Festival
October · Ashshin View October →
  • Oct 2 Amavasya Festival
  • Oct 2 Sarva Pitru Amavasya Festival
  • Oct 2 Gandhi Jayanti Festival
  • Oct 3 Sharad Navratri Festival
  • Oct 7 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Oct 10 Durga Ashtami Festival
  • Oct 11 Maha Navami Festival
  • Oct 12 Dussehra Festival
  • Oct 14 Papankusha Ekadashi Festival
  • Oct 15 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Oct 17 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Oct 17 Sharad Purnima Festival
  • Oct 17 Tula Sankranti Festival
  • Oct 20 Karva Chauth Festival
  • Oct 24 Ahoi Ashtami Festival
  • Oct 28 Utpanna Ekadashi Festival
  • Oct 29 Dhanteras Festival
  • Oct 29 Govatsa Dwadashi Festival
  • Oct 30 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Oct 30 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Oct 30 Narak Chaturdashi Festival
  • Oct 31 Diwali Festival
November · Kartik View November →
  • Nov 1 Amavasya Festival
  • Nov 2 Govardhan Puja Festival
  • Nov 3 Bhaiya Dooj Festival
  • Nov 5 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Nov 7 Chhath Puja Festival
  • Nov 11 Kansa Vadh Festival
  • Nov 12 Devutthana Ekadashi Festival
  • Nov 13 Tulasi Vivah Festival
  • Nov 14 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Nov 15 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Nov 16 Vrishchika Sankranti Festival
  • Nov 19 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Nov 22 Kalabhairav Jayanti Festival
  • Nov 26 Saphala Ekadashi Festival
  • Nov 28 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Nov 29 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Nov 29 Masik Shivaratri Festival
December · Poush View December →
  • Dec 1 Amavasya Festival
  • Dec 5 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Dec 6 Vivah Panchami Festival
  • Dec 11 Mokshada Ekadashi Festival
  • Dec 11 Gita Jayanti Festival
  • Dec 13 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Dec 15 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Dec 15 Dattatreya Jayanti Festival
  • Dec 16 Dhanu Sankranti Festival
  • Dec 19 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Dec 28 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Dec 29 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Dec 30 Amavasya Festival
📖 About the Bengali Calendar
Lunisolar system · Tithi, nakshatra, paksha
The Bengali festival year traces a distinctive arc through its twelve solar months, each named for the rashi the Sun occupies, and unfolds from Naba Barsha in mid-April to Charak Puja at the year's end in mid-April the following year. The year in force is Bangabda 1433, opened on Boishakh 1 (April 14, 2026). Boishakh opens the year with Naba Barsha and the Halkhata ritual — traders' new account books, Lakshmi-Ganesh puja in shops, sweets distributed to customers, the commercial new year fused with the ceremonial. Joishtho brings Jamai Shashti, when sons-in-law are feasted and honoured. Asharh closes with Rath Yatra, the great Jagannath chariot festival whose central observance is at Puri but which resonates through every Bengali neighbourhood. Shrabon carries Jhulan Yatra (Krishna's swing festival) and Raksha Bandhan. Bhadro holds Janmashtami and Vishvakarma Puja (when artisans and factory workers worship their tools). Then Ashshin arrives — and with it, Durga Puja, the year's emotional and cultural apex. The five-day arc from Saptami through Vijaya Dashami (Bisarjan) is the event that Bengali life organises itself around, months in advance: pandal construction, thematic artworks, new clothes for everyone, family returns from across India and abroad. Immediately after, Kojagari Lakshmi Puja on Ashshin Purnima. Then Kartik brings Kali Puja (on the same Amavasya night as Diwali in north India), Bhai Phonta (Bhai Dooj equivalent), and a few weeks later Jagaddhatri Puja. The arc quiets after Kartik. Poush Sankranti in mid-January is the Pithe parban — sweet rice cakes prepared overnight and eaten throughout the day. Magh brings Saraswati Puja on Magh Shukla Panchami. Falgun's Dol Yatra (Bengali Holi, also called Dol Purnima) fills the streets with coloured powder. And Choitro closes the year with Charak Puja and Gajan, ancient Shaiva folk rituals observed across rural Bengal on Choitro Sankranti eve — the last night of the Bengali year.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Bengali festivals always fall on the same Gregorian date every year?

Solar-anchored festivals are essentially fixed: Naba Barsha (Boishakh 1) always falls on April 14 (occasionally April 15 in a Gregorian leap-year adjustment). Poush Sankranti always falls on January 14 — the same day as Makar Sankranti across India, Pongal in Tamil Nadu, Uttarayan in Gujarat, and Lohri in Punjab, all observing the Sun's entry into Capricorn. Most other Bengali festivals are tithi-anchored and shift annually: Durga Puja moves within a two-to-three week window in late September to mid-October; Kali Puja moves with Kartika Amavasya in October-November; Saraswati Puja shifts within late January to mid-February depending on when Magh Shukla Panchami falls. For accurate dates in a given year, use this calendar and set your city in the location bar, as tithi boundaries are sunrise-dependent.

When is Durga Puja in 2026?

Durga Puja runs across Ashshin Shukla Saptami through Vijaya Dashami. Mahalaya — the preceding Amavasya, when the Chandipath dawn broadcast marks the beginning of Devi Paksha — sets the festival countdown. In 2026, Mahalaya and the Durga Puja five-day arc fall in late September to early October; the precise Saptami date depends on when the Ashshin Shukla tithi sequence begins after Mahalaya. Check the Ashshin month view on this app for city-specific tithi boundaries. Vijaya Dashami (Bisarjan, the immersion day) is the tenth tithi of Ashshin Shukla Paksha. Kojagari Lakshmi Puja follows on the same Purnima night — so the Ashshin festival arc runs from Mahalaya through the full moon.

What is Pithe parban?

Pithe parban is the Bengali festival of sweet rice cakes, centred on Poush Sankranti (January 14) — the day the Sun enters Capricorn, shared with Makar Sankranti across India and Pongal in Tamil Nadu. In Bengali tradition the emphasis falls entirely on the pithe: dozens of varieties of sweet cakes made from rice flour, jaggery, date palm sugar (nolen gur), coconut, and milk. Family matriarchs begin preparation the night before, often making puli pithe (rice flour dumplings filled with coconut-jaggery), gokul pithe (fried rice cakes in syrup), and patishapta (crêpe-style rolls filled with coconut and khoya). The extended family gathers on the morning of Poush Sankranti to eat together. The festival marks the winter's turn and the harvest season's close — different in expression from the kite-flying of Gujarat's Uttarayan or the rice-pot-boiling of Tamil Pongal, but the same astronomical anchor.

What is the difference between Lakshmi Puja and Kojagari, and how is it different from Diwali?

Kojagari Lakshmi Puja is the Bengali name for the Lakshmi Puja observed on Ashshin Purnima — the full moon of Bengali month Ashshin (Ashvina), immediately after Vijaya Dashami (the last day of Durga Puja). Families welcome Lakshmi by lighting clay lamps, drawing alpana (floor patterns), and offering sweets, fruits, and lotus flowers. 'Kojagari' means 'who is awake?' — a reference to the belief that Lakshmi visits only those households where the lamps burn through the night. This is entirely distinct from the Lakshmi Puja observed in North and West India on Kartika Amavasya (Diwali night). Bengal observes Kali Puja on that same Kartika Amavasya night — the night that north India lights lamps for Lakshmi, Bengal lights them for Kali. These are two different festivals on two different tithis, separated by about two weeks.

What is Charak Puja and what is Gajan?

Charak Puja is a Shaiva folk festival observed on Choitro Sankranti eve — the last day of the Bengali year, typically April 13. Devotees of Shiva undergo austerities and, in the traditional form, are suspended from the Charak tree (a vertical pole with a rotating arm) by hooks pierced through the skin and rotated. The practice is now less common in its severe form but remains symbolically observed in rural Bengal. Gajan is the broader festival cycle of Shaiva rituals in Choitro and occasionally extending into the end of Bhadro — folk performances, processions of Shiva devotees (Gambhira dancers in some areas), and rites associated with Shiva, Dharmaraj, and Nilkantha. Gajan has pre-Brahminical roots and is most intensely observed in West Bengal's rural districts. Both Charak and Gajan mark the closing of the Bengali year before Naba Barsha on Boishakh 1.

Why does the Bengali year begin on April 14 instead of January 1?

The Bengali Bangabda calendar is a solar calendar tied to Mesha sankranti — the Sun's entry into Aries (Mesha rashi). This is the same astronomical anchor as Tamil Puthandu and Punjabi Vaisakhi, which fall on the same day. The Gregorian January 1 has no astrological or seasonal significance in Bengali tradition. The Mesha sankranti in mid-April marks the astronomical start of the solar year as understood in Vedic and subsequent Indian mathematical astronomy — the Sun at the vernal equinox position (accounting for ayanamsa). The Bengali new year at this point is shared by several Indian solar calendar traditions; what makes it Bangabda-specific is the epoch (starting ~593 CE) and the cultural practices — Halkhata, Mangal Shobhajatra, the spring fair — attached to Naba Barsha.