Skip to main content
Gujarati Year 2018

Gujarati Festivals 2018

Columbus, Ohio, US · 12 lunar months
Columbus, Ohio, US Change
Ayanamsa
Time format
January · Fagan View January →
  • Jan 1 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Jan 5 Sakat Chauth Festival
  • Jan 5 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Jan 12 Vijaya Ekadashi Festival
  • Jan 14 Makar Sankranti Festival
  • Jan 14 Thai Pongal Festival
  • Jan 14 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jan 14 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Jan 15 Makar Sankranti Festival
  • Jan 15 Thai Pongal Festival
  • Jan 16 Makar Sankranti Festival
  • Jan 16 Mauni Amavas Festival
  • Jan 16 Thai Pongal Festival
  • Jan 16 Amavasya Festival
  • Jan 17 Makar Sankranti Festival
  • Jan 17 Thai Pongal Festival
  • Jan 18 Makar Sankranti Festival
  • Jan 18 Thai Pongal Festival
  • Jan 20 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Jan 21 Vasant Panchami Festival
  • Jan 23 Ratha Saptami Festival
  • Jan 24 Bhishma Ashtami Festival
  • Jan 26 Republic Day Festival
  • Jan 27 Jaya Ekadashi Festival
  • Jan 29 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jan 31 Purnima Vrat Festival
February · Fagan View February →
  • Feb 3 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Feb 10 Papamochani Ekadashi Festival
  • Feb 13 Maha Shivaratri Festival
  • Feb 13 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Feb 13 Kumbha Sankranti Festival
  • Feb 13 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Feb 14 Kumbha Sankranti Festival
  • Feb 15 Amavasya Festival
  • Feb 15 Kumbha Sankranti Festival
  • Feb 16 Kumbha Sankranti Festival
  • Feb 17 Kumbha Sankranti Festival
  • Feb 19 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Feb 27 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
March · Chaitra View March →
  • Mar 1 Holi Festival
  • Mar 1 Holika Dahan Festival
  • Mar 1 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Mar 5 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Mar 9 Sheetala Ashtami Festival
  • Mar 12 Varuthini Ekadashi Festival
  • Mar 14 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Mar 15 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Mar 15 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Mar 15 Meena Sankranti Festival
  • Mar 16 Meena Sankranti Festival
  • Mar 17 Amavasya Festival
  • Mar 17 Meena Sankranti Festival
  • Mar 18 Chaitra Navratri Festival
  • Mar 18 Gudi Padwa Festival
  • Mar 18 Ugadi Festival
  • Mar 18 Meena Sankranti Festival
  • Mar 19 Meena Sankranti Festival
  • Mar 20 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Mar 22 Yamuna Chhath Festival
  • Mar 25 Ram Navami Festival
  • Mar 25 Swaminarayan Jayanti Festival
  • Mar 27 Kamada Ekadashi Festival
  • Mar 29 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Mar 31 Hanuman Jayanti Festival
  • Mar 31 Purnima Vrat Festival
April · Vaishakh View April →
  • Apr 4 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Apr 11 Apara Ekadashi Festival
  • Apr 13 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Apr 13 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Apr 14 Mesha Sankranti Festival
  • Apr 15 Mesha Sankranti Festival
  • Apr 15 Amavasya Festival
  • Apr 16 Mesha Sankranti Festival
  • Apr 17 Mesha Sankranti Festival
  • Apr 18 Akshaya Tritiya Festival
  • Apr 18 Mesha Sankranti Festival
  • Apr 18 Parashurama Jayanti Festival
  • Apr 19 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Apr 22 Ganga Saptami Festival
  • Apr 23 Sita Navami Festival
  • Apr 25 Mohini Ekadashi Festival
  • Apr 27 Narasimha Jayanti Festival
  • Apr 27 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Apr 29 Buddha Purnima Festival
  • Apr 29 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Apr 30 Narada Jayanti Festival
May · Jeth View May →
  • May 3 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • May 11 Yogini Ekadashi Festival
  • May 13 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • May 13 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • May 15 Vat Savitri Vrat Festival
  • May 15 Amavasya Festival
  • May 15 Shani Jayanti Festival
  • May 15 Vrishabha Sankranti Festival
  • May 16 Vrishabha Sankranti Festival
  • May 17 Vrishabha Sankranti Festival
  • May 18 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • May 18 Vrishabha Sankranti Festival
  • May 19 Vrishabha Sankranti Festival
  • May 24 Ganga Dussehra Festival
  • May 25 Nirjala Ekadashi Festival
  • May 27 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • May 29 Vat Purnima Vrat Festival
  • May 29 Purnima Vrat Festival
June · Ashadh View June →
  • Jun 2 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Jun 9 Kamika Ekadashi Festival
  • Jun 11 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jun 11 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Jun 13 Amavasya Festival
  • Jun 15 Mithuna Sankranti Festival
  • Jun 16 Mithuna Sankranti Festival
  • Jun 16 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Jun 17 Mithuna Sankranti Festival
  • Jun 18 Mithuna Sankranti Festival
  • Jun 19 Mithuna Sankranti Festival
  • Jun 20 Mithuna Sankranti Festival
  • Jun 22 Ganga Dussehra Festival
  • Jun 23 Nirjala Ekadashi Festival
  • Jun 25 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jun 27 Vat Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Jun 27 Purnima Vrat Festival
July · Shravan View July →
  • Jul 2 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Jul 9 Kamika Ekadashi Festival
  • Jul 11 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Jul 12 Amavasya Festival
  • Jul 14 Jagannath Rathyatra Festival
  • Jul 16 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Jul 17 Karka Sankranti Festival
  • Jul 18 Karka Sankranti Festival
  • Jul 19 Karka Sankranti Festival
  • Jul 20 Karka Sankranti Festival
  • Jul 21 Karka Sankranti Festival
  • Jul 22 Devshayani Ekadashi Festival
  • Jul 23 Devshayani Ekadashi Festival
  • Jul 25 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Jul 27 Guru Purnima Festival
  • Jul 27 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Jul 31 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
August · Bhadarvo View August →
  • Aug 7 Aja Ekadashi Festival
  • Aug 9 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Aug 9 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Aug 13 Hariyali Teej Festival
  • Aug 14 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Aug 15 Independence Day Festival
  • Aug 15 Nag Panchami Festival
  • Aug 17 Simha Sankranti Festival
  • Aug 18 Simha Sankranti Festival
  • Aug 19 Simha Sankranti Festival
  • Aug 20 Simha Sankranti Festival
  • Aug 21 Shravana Putrada Ekadashi Festival
  • Aug 21 Simha Sankranti Festival
  • Aug 23 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Aug 25 Raksha Bandhan Festival
  • Aug 25 Gayatri Jayanti Festival
  • Aug 25 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Aug 26 Raksha Bandhan Festival
  • Aug 26 Gayatri Jayanti Festival
  • Aug 26 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Aug 29 Kajari Teej Festival
  • Aug 30 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
September · Aaso View September →
  • Sep 5 Indira Ekadashi Festival
  • Sep 7 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Sep 7 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Sep 9 Amavasya Festival
  • Sep 12 Ganesh Chaturthi Festival
  • Sep 12 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Sep 13 Rishi Panchami Festival
  • Sep 14 Balarama Jayanti Festival
  • Sep 16 Radha Ashtami Festival
  • Sep 17 Radha Ashtami Festival
  • Sep 17 Kanya Sankranti Festival
  • Sep 18 Kanya Sankranti Festival
  • Sep 19 Kanya Sankranti Festival
  • Sep 20 Kanya Sankranti Festival
  • Sep 20 Parsva Ekadashi Festival
  • Sep 21 Kanya Sankranti Festival
  • Sep 22 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Sep 23 Anant Chaturdashi Festival
  • Sep 24 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Sep 25 Pitrupaksha Festival
  • Sep 28 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
October · Kartak View October →
  • Oct 2 Gandhi Jayanti Festival
  • Oct 5 Rama Ekadashi Festival
  • Oct 6 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Oct 7 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Oct 8 Sarva Pitru Amavasya Festival
  • Oct 8 Amavasya Festival
  • Oct 9 Sharad Navratri Festival
  • Oct 12 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Oct 16 Durga Ashtami Festival
  • Oct 17 Maha Navami Festival
  • Oct 18 Dussehra Festival
  • Oct 18 Tula Sankranti Festival
  • Oct 19 Tula Sankranti Festival
  • Oct 20 Papankusha Ekadashi Festival
  • Oct 20 Tula Sankranti Festival
  • Oct 21 Tula Sankranti Festival
  • Oct 22 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Oct 22 Tula Sankranti Festival
  • Oct 24 Sharad Purnima Festival
  • Oct 24 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Oct 31 Ahoi Ashtami Festival
November · Magshar View November →
  • Nov 3 Utpanna Ekadashi Festival
  • Nov 4 Dhanteras Festival
  • Nov 4 Govatsa Dwadashi Festival
  • Nov 5 Narak Chaturdashi Festival
  • Nov 5 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Nov 5 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Nov 6 Diwali Festival
  • Nov 7 Amavasya Festival
  • Nov 8 Govardhan Puja Festival
  • Nov 9 Bhaiya Dooj Festival
  • Nov 11 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Nov 13 Chhath Puja Festival
  • Nov 17 Kansa Vadh Festival
  • Nov 17 Vrishchika Sankranti Festival
  • Nov 18 Devutthana Ekadashi Festival
  • Nov 18 Vrishchika Sankranti Festival
  • Nov 19 Tulasi Vivah Festival
  • Nov 19 Vrishchika Sankranti Festival
  • Nov 20 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Nov 20 Vrishchika Sankranti Festival
  • Nov 22 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Nov 26 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
  • Nov 29 Kalabhairav Jayanti Festival
December · Posh View December →
  • Dec 2 Saphala Ekadashi Festival
  • Dec 4 Krishna Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Dec 5 Masik Shivaratri Festival
  • Dec 6 Amavasya Festival
  • Dec 10 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Dec 11 Vinayaka Chaturthi Festival
  • Dec 12 Vivah Panchami Festival
  • Dec 16 Dhanu Sankranti Festival
  • Dec 17 Dhanu Sankranti Festival
  • Dec 18 Gita Jayanti Festival
  • Dec 18 Mokshada Ekadashi Festival
  • Dec 18 Dhanu Sankranti Festival
  • Dec 19 Dhanu Sankranti Festival
  • Dec 20 Dhanu Sankranti Festival
  • Dec 20 Shukla Pradosh Vrat Festival
  • Dec 22 Dattatreya Jayanti Festival
  • Dec 22 Purnima Vrat Festival
  • Dec 25 Sankashti Chaturthi Festival
📖 About the Gujarati Calendar
Lunisolar system · Tithi, nakshatra, paksha
The Gujarati festival year has a distinctive shape: it opens in Kartak — not Chaitra — with the Diwali week and Bestu Varas, making the year-start the loudest and most commercially significant event on the calendar. The year in force is Vikram Samvat 2082 (Kartik-based), opened on Bestu Varas in November 2025 and rolling to VS 2083 after Diwali 2026. The arc begins with five major days in close succession in Kartak: Diwali (Lakshmi Puja on Aaso Krishna Amavasya, technically the last night of Aaso), then Bestu Varas (Kartak Shukla Padvo, the new year), Bhai Bij (Kartak Shukla Bij), Labh Pancham (Kartak Shukla Panchami, the business-opening day), and Devdiwali (Kartik Purnima, temple illumination). After this opening week the year quiets through Magshar and Posh. Maha brings Uttarayan (January 14, the kite festival), Vasant Panchami, and Maha Shivaratri. Fagan brings Holi (Fagan Sud Punam) and Dhuleti (color play the next day). Vaishakh is dominated by Akshay Trij, the year's biggest gold-purchase day. Chaturmas begins with Ashadhi Beej in Ashadh and runs through Kartak — four months when auspicious events (weddings, griha pravesh, upanayanam) are deferred. Janmashtami in Shravan and Ganesh Chaturthi in Bhadarvo anchor the monsoon season. Then Aaso brings the year's cultural apex: nine nights of Navratri Garba (Aaso Shukla Pratipada through Navami), Dussehra (Aaso Shukla Dashami), and finally Diwali on Aaso Krishna Amavasya — which immediately leads into the next year's Bestu Varas in Kartak. The wheel closes on itself.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does the Gujarati year start in Kartak, not Chaitra?

The Kartik-based Vikram Samvat is a historical Gujarati convention tying the new year to the day after Diwali — Bestu Varas, Kartak Shukla Pratipada. This is one of two recognised Vikram Samvat reckonings: the other (Chaitra-based) is used by most North Indian Hindus, with the year rolling on Chaitra Shukla Pratipada (Gudi Padwa, late March or early April). Gujarat, parts of Maharashtra, and certain Jain communities follow the Kartik reckoning. The astronomical lunar days are identical in both; only the year-roll date differs. This means the Gujarati VS year number runs one behind the Chaitra-based VS for the portion of the Gregorian year between April (Chaitra rollover) and November (Kartak rollover) — and they align for the months from Kartak rollover through the following Chaitra.

When is Diwali and what is the Diwali week sequence in 2026?

Diwali falls on Aaso Krishna Amavasya — the new moon of the Gujarati month Aaso (Ashvina), in late October or mid-November depending on the year. The five-day sequence around Diwali 2026 is: Dhanteras (Aaso Krishna Trayodashi), Kali Chaudas (Aaso Krishna Chaturdashi, the night of Kali worship), Diwali / Lakshmi Puja (Aaso Krishna Amavasya), Bestu Varas (Kartak Shukla Padvo — New Year's day, the morning after Diwali), Bhai Bij (Kartak Shukla Bij — Bhai Dooj equivalent). Check the Aaso and Kartak month views on this calendar for exact 2026 Gregorian dates, which shift with the lunar cycle.

What is Labh Pancham and why do Gujarati businesses treat it as the real opening day?

Labh Pancham is Kartak Shukla Panchami — the 5th day of the bright half of Kartak, five days after Bestu Varas. The day's name means 'auspicious fifth' (labh = profit/benefit, pancham = fifth), and it is considered the most auspicious day of the new Gujarati year to formally open shops, sign business agreements, launch new ventures, and make the year's first major purchase. Many Gujarati traders keep their shops closed from Diwali through Labh Pancham — a six-day holiday — and reopen on Labh Pancham with a puja and a fresh start. In diamond and textile trading communities in Surat and Mumbai, Labh Pancham marks the effective start of the business year, regardless of what the Gregorian calendar says.

What is Uttarayan and how is it celebrated in Gujarat?

Uttarayan is Makar Sankranti (January 14) — the Sun's transit into Makara (Capricorn), marking the start of its northward journey (uttarayan = northward path). In Gujarat, Uttarayan is primarily a kite festival: Ahmedabad's International Kite Festival draws participants from across India and abroad; families in Surat, Vadodara, and Rajkot gather on rooftops from dawn; manjha (the coated string used to cut rival kites) and colourful fighter kites fill the sky until sunset. Food is central: chikki (sesame-peanut brittle), til-gud (sesame-jaggery sweets), and undhiyu (mixed-vegetable winter dish cooked underground or in a pot) are the signature Uttarayan preparations. Vasi-Uttarayan the next day extends the celebrations. The same astronomical event is called Pongal in Tamil Nadu and Pithe parban in Bengal.

What restrictions do Gujaratis observe during Shravan?

Shravan (July-August) is the peak Shaiva devotional month and the strictest dietary month for many Gujaratis. Strict vegetarianism is standard, with many households additionally avoiding onion and garlic for the entire month. Shravan Somvar (Monday) fasts honour Lord Shiva — devotees fast through the day, visit Shiva temples for abhishekam, and break the fast in the evening. Janmashtami (Shravan Krishna Ashtami) marks Krishna's birth with midnight celebrations, matki-phod (pot-breaking to reach butter, re-enacting Krishna's childhood), and bhajan through the night. The Pushtimarg Vaishnav sect — Gujarat's dominant Vaishnav community tracing to Vallabhacharya — is especially active in Shravan with haveli sangeet (devotional music in Krishna temples) and continuous kirtan.

What is Akshay Trij and why is it the biggest jewelry day in Gujarat?

Akshay Trij (Akshaya Tritiya, Vaishakh Shukla Tritiya, late April or early May) is one of the four 'akshay' or self-auspicious days in the Vedic calendar — days so auspicious that no separate muhurat calculation is needed. Gujarati jewellery showrooms run their biggest sales of the year on Akshay Trij; the belief that gold purchased on this day will 'multiply' (akshay = imperishable) drives enormous buying activity. Weddings and griha pravesh planned without a specific muhurat are often held on Akshay Trij. The day is pan-Hindu but Gujarati commercial culture makes it the year's peak gold-purchase moment. Jain Gujaratis additionally observe the day as Akha Trij, commemorating the end of the first tirthankara Rishabhanatha's long fast.