Vikram Samvat 177 – 178
Hindu Festivals 2120
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India · 12 lunar months
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
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2120 includes 283 festivals and observances in the Hindu calendar. Major celebrations include Republic Day, Holi, Independence Day, Sharad Navratri, Dussehra. New to the Vedic calendar? See how it works.
January
Magha
JAN26
Republic Day
Major
JAN28
Goddess Kali
Vrats & fasting days
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
Amavasya
Other fasts
February
PhalgunaMarch
ChaitraApril
VaisakhaMay
JyaisthaJune
AshadhaJuly
ShravanaAugust
Bhadrapada
AUG1
Lord Vishnu (Kalki avatar)
AUG5
Lord Krishna, Radha
AUG9
Goddess Gayatri
AUG13
Naga (Serpent deities)
AUG13
Manasa, Naga (Serpent deities)
AUG15
Lord Krishna
AUG15
Independence Day
Major
AUG27
Lord Vishnu (Varaha avatar)
AUG28
Lord Ganesha
AUG30
Lord Balarama
AUG31
Goddess Gauri (Mahalakshmi)
Vrats & fasting days
Ekadashi
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
September
Ashvina
SEP1
Radha
SEP1
Goddess Gauri (Mahalakshmi)
SEP2
Goddess Gauri (Mahalakshmi)
SEP5
Lord Vishnu (Vamana avatar)
SEP6
Lord Vishnu, Lord Ganesha
SEP23
Sharad Navratri
Major
Goddess Durga
SEP28
Goddess Durga
SEP29
Goddess Durga
SEP30
Goddess Durga
SEP30
Goddess Saraswati
Vrats & fasting days
Ekadashi
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
Amavasya
October
Kartika
OCT1
Goddess Durga
OCT1
Goddess Saraswati
OCT1
Goddess Saraswati
OCT1
Goddess Durga
OCT2
Goddess Durga
OCT6
Goddess Lakshmi, Lord Krishna
OCT20
Lord Hanuman
OCT21
Lord Krishna
OCT21
Goddess Lakshmi, Goddess Sharda
OCT23
Lord Krishna
OCT24
Yama, Yamuna
OCT28
Surya (Sun God), Chhathi Maiya
OCT29
Sant Jalaram Bapa
OCT30
Goddess Jagaddhatri
OCT31
Lord Krishna
Vrats & fasting days
Ekadashi
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
Amavasya
November
MargashirshaDecember
PaushaVrats & fasting days
Ekadashi
Chaturthi & Chauth
Shivaratri
Purnima
Other fasts
Nothing selected — turn on at least one category above.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which festivals fall on roughly the same Gregorian date every year?
Solar-anchored festivals are tied to the Sun's transit through a zodiac sign rather than the moon phase, so they repeat within a day or two on the Gregorian calendar. Makar Sankranti always falls on January 14 or 15 (Sun enters Capricorn). Mesha Sankranti (Sun enters Aries) is April 13–14, celebrated as Baisakhi in Punjab, Puthandu in Tamil Nadu, and Poila Baisakh in Bengal. Karka Sankranti (Sun enters Cancer) is July 15–16. All other major Hindu festivals — Diwali, Holi, Navratri, Janmashtami, Ganesh Chaturthi, Ram Navami, Ekadashis — are lunar and shift 11 days earlier on the Gregorian calendar each year, corrected periodically by an extra month.
What is Chaturmas and when is it?
Chaturmas literally means 'four months' — the period 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, Lord Vishnu is believed to be in yoganidra (cosmic sleep), and no major auspicious life events — vivah, upanayanam, griha pravesh, mundan — are conducted by most Hindu communities. Vaishnavas and many North Indian families observe all four months strictly. Some communities observe only the core two months (Ashadha and Bhadrapada). Chaturmas ends with Devuthani Ekadashi, also called Tulsi Vivah, when auspicious events resume. The wedding season that opens in November and runs through winter is directly a consequence of this annual pause.
When are the major Ekadashis in the Hindu year?
There are 24 Ekadashis in a standard year (two per lunar month, one in Shukla paksha and one in Krishna paksha), with an extra two in a leap year with an Adhika Maasa. The four most widely observed are: Devshayani Ekadashi (Ashadha Shukla 11) marking the start of Chaturmas; Devuthani Ekadashi (Kartika Shukla 11) ending Chaturmas; Vaikuntha Ekadashi (Margashirsha Shukla 11 in Tamil Margazhi), the holiest Vaishnava Ekadashi; and Mokshada Ekadashi (also Margashirsha Shukla 11 in the North Indian convention), the day the Bhagavad Gita was narrated. Most observant Vaishnavas keep all 24.
How does the Amanta or Purnimanta toggle affect the year festival list?
Festival dates are completely identical between Amanta and Purnimanta — Diwali is on the same Gregorian date, Holi is on the same date, every Ekadashi is on the same date. The toggle only changes the lunar month name under which each festival is listed. A festival in the Krishna Paksha of Bhadrapada (like Pitru Paksha) remains in Bhadrapada in Purnimanta, but appears in Ashvina in Amanta — same dates, different heading. For most festival-planning purposes you will not notice the difference. It matters most for understanding which month a family panchang refers to when it says 'Ashvina Krishna Ashtami' versus 'Bhadrapada Krishna Ashtami'.
What is the difference between this Hindu calendar and a regional calendar like Tamil or Bengali?
This Hindu calendar uses lunar months — Chaitra, Vaisakha, Jyaistha, Ashadha, Shravana, Bhadrapada, Ashvina, Kartika, Margashirsha, Pausha, Magha, Phalguna — which drift against the Gregorian year. The Tamil calendar uses solar months (Chithirai, Vaikasi, Aani…) tied to the Sun's position in each zodiac sign; Tamil months are stable relative to the Gregorian calendar. The Bengali calendar is also solar (Boishakh, Jyaishtha, Asharh…) with a different year count. This Hindu page shows pan-Indian festivals valid across all traditions. The Tamil and Bengali tradition pages on this site add region-specific festivals (Pongal, Naba Barsha) that are not on the Hindu page.
Why does the Vikram Samvat year sometimes read 2082 in other sources?
There are two conventions for when Vikram Samvat rolls over to the new year. The North Indian convention — used on this page — increments at Chaitra Shukla Pratipada, which falls in late March or early April. So from January 1 until Chaitra Shukla Pratipada, the VS year is still 2082; it becomes 2083 after that point in spring 2026. The Gujarati convention increments at Kartika Shukla Pratipada — the day after Diwali, called Bestu Varas — which means Gujarati sources switched to 2082 at Diwali 2025 and will switch to 2083 at Diwali 2026. Both are valid; the page makes clear which convention it follows.