From Pushkar's desert carnival to Thrissur's temple percussion — subscribe and we'll nudge you at 90, 30, 7 and 1 days before each festival begins.
The mother of all temple festivals
A 36-hour spectacle centred on the Vadakkunnathan temple — 30 caparisoned elephants, synchronised parasol exchanges, and a 7-hour percussion ensemble that draws musicians from across Kerala.
Sikkim's most sacred Buddhist day
Monks carry the 1,000-page Kangyur scriptures on a 5 km procession around Gangtok, reciting aloud. Devotees light thousands of butter lamps at monasteries; Tsomgo Lake and Rumtek see thousands of prostrations through the night.
Ladakh's monastic mask dance celebration
The largest Buddhist monastic festival in Ladakh, held at the 17th-century Hemis Monastery. Monks perform the Cham — elaborate masked dances depicting the victory of good over evil.
The 108 km barefoot pilgrimage
Eight million pilgrims dressed in saffron walk the 108 km from Sultanganj's Ajgaibinath Ghat (Bihar) to Baidyanath Dham (Jharkhand) — filling kanwars with Ganga water, barefoot, over 2–3 days through July-August rains.
Hyderabad's goddess procession of the monsoons
Women in bright cotton sarees balance 'bonam' pots — rice, jaggery and curd topped with burning diyas — on their heads in processions to Mahakali temples. The Potharaju men, smeared in turmeric and vermilion, dance possessed at the front.
The chariot festival of Puri
Three massive wooden chariots, each 45 feet tall, are pulled by thousands of devotees through the streets of Puri. The Lord Jagannath leaves the temple once a year — and millions gather to pull the ropes.
The world's longest Dussehra — 75 days of tribal ritual
Jagdalpur's Dussehra runs 75 days instead of 10 — a tribal festival honouring the goddess Danteshwari, not Rama's victory. Its climax features a 400-year-old wooden chariot pulled by thousands of tribal youth across the town.
Kerala's 10-day harvest homecoming
Every home lays out the Pookalam (flower carpet), families gather for the Sadya (26-course banana-leaf feast), and Alappuzha hosts the Nehru Trophy snake-boat race — 100-rower longboats sprinting through backwaters.
Where tribal Gujarat chooses life partners
A 3-day tribal fair near the Trinetreshwar temple — famous as a traditional matchmaking ground. Unmarried men carry embroidered umbrellas as a courtship signal; women in mirror-work dresses dance in the Raas circle.
India's sibling bond festival
A simple ritual across every home: sisters tie a decorative thread (rakhi) on their brothers' wrists, brothers pledge protection in return, and families exchange sweets. Post offices handle record parcels for weeks prior.
High-altitude showcase of a fading culture
A two-week cultural festival across Leh — polo matches on the world's highest polo ground, archery contests, traditional dances, and a closing mask dance at Shey Monastery.
Mumbai's human pyramids for Krishna
Midnight aarti at every Krishna temple on Janmashtami, followed the next morning by Dahi Handi — Govinda troupes form 7-tier human pyramids to smash clay pots of curd hung across Mumbai's streets. Prize purses can touch ₹25 lakh per handi.
The city that becomes one giant pandal
Mumbai's biggest festival. Neighbourhoods compete with towering Ganpati idols, tens of thousands line Girgaum Chowpatty for the immersion, and Lalbaugcha Raja alone draws 1.5 million visitors.
Indie music in an Apatani paddy valley
India's most unique outdoor music festival. Independent musicians from across Asia perform in a UNESCO-recognised rice paddy valley surrounded by the Apatani tribal community's ancestral land.
Telangana's 9-day flower festival
Women in traditional silk sarees build 7-tier conical arrangements of seasonal wildflowers — the 'floral goddess' — and sing in circles around her at dusk, then immerse her in the nearest lake on Day 9. Every Telangana village becomes a flower mandala.
The Wadiyar royal festival of Karnataka
A 400-year royal tradition. The Mysuru Palace is illuminated by 100,000 bulbs every evening; Vijaya Dashami climaxes with the Jumboo Savari — a caparisoned elephant carries the golden howdah of Goddess Chamundeshwari in a 5 km procession through the city.
The world's longest dance festival
Nine nights of non-stop Garba and Dandiya in Gujarat. Tens of thousands fill open-air maidans in chaniya-choli and kurta-pyjama, dancing concentric circles until dawn. Ahmedabad's United Way hosts the official Guinness-scale event.
The City of Joy's UNESCO-listed festival
Kolkata's streets become open-air art galleries as thousands of pandals (themed temporary temples) compete with elaborate installations. A city-wide festival that blurs religion, art and street food.
The moonlit fast for a husband's life
Married women in the north fast from sunrise until moonrise, dressing in red bridal finery. At moonrise they view the moon through a sieve, then their husband's face, and break fast with water from their partner's hands. Courtyards fill with song.
Festival on the White Salt Desert
A three-month cultural extravaganza on the world's largest salt desert. Luxury tent city, folk music under the full moon, and a surreal white landscape stretching to the horizon.
Festival of Lights in the Pink City
The Pink City transforms into a city of gold as every bazaar, haveli and fort is draped in diyas and fairy lights. Johari Bazaar is the jewel — competition-winning decorations light up entire streets.
Meghalaya's Hundred Drums Festival
The Garo tribe's post-harvest thanksgiving. 100+ traditional long drums (dama) are beaten in synchronised rhythms by bare-chested warriors in feather headdresses; dancers perform the Ajema and Grika in concentric rings at Asanang.
Bihar's 4-day sun worship by the Ganga
The only festival where devotees worship the setting sun before the rising one. Entire families camp on river ghats for 36 hours of fasting, standing waist-deep in water at dawn and dusk, offering thekua and fruit to Surya.
Desert carnival of camels, colour & culture
One of the world's largest camel fairs, set against the sacred Pushkar lake in the Thar desert. Livestock trading by day, folk performances by night, and the full-moon bathing ritual at its climax.
The birth anniversary of the first Sikh Guru
The Golden Temple is illuminated end to end; thousands of Sikhs gather for the 48-hour Akhand Path (non-stop recitation of the Guru Granth Sahib). Nagar Kirtan processions wind through Amritsar led by the Panj Pyare and the Palki Sahib.
Asia's largest cattle fair
A month-long fair at the confluence of the Ganga and Gandak, where traders have gathered since Chandragupta Maurya's era. Elephants, horses, cattle, birds, and the endangered Nautanki folk theatre all in one place.
Old Goa's grand pilgrimage feast
250,000 pilgrims descend on Old Goa for the feast day of Goa's patron saint. A 9-day novena precedes; on the feast day, a High Mass is held in the plaza before the Basilica of Bom Jesus where his incorrupt body lies.
The birthplace of the Bhagavad Gita
Marks the day Lord Krishna delivered the Bhagavad Gita to Arjuna on the Kurukshetra battlefield. The Brahma Sarovar tank is lit with 10,000 diyas; 700 Sanskrit scholars recite the Gita's 700 verses simultaneously.
Festival of Festivals — all 17 Naga tribes in one place
Nagaland's biggest cultural celebration brings together all major tribes — Ao, Angami, Konyak, Sumi and more — for a 10-day showcase of warrior dances, indigenous sports, cuisine and crafts.
Sikkim's New Year under Kanchenjunga
The Bhutia community's new year festival, marked by Cham mask dances at Rumtek, Phodong, and Tsuklakhang monasteries. Ends with the Chaam of the Black Hat Dancers — a ritual exorcism of the old year.
Indo-Portuguese Christmas on the beaches
Goa's 400-year Catholic legacy makes this India's most authentic Christmas. Midnight masses at Se Cathedral and Bom Jesus, candle-lit stars hanging from every balcão, sweetbread exchanges, and beach shacks hosting week-long carnivals.
Asia's biggest electronic music festival
Three days of 200+ international and Indian DJs across 5 stages on the sands of North Goa. Held between Christmas and New Year — Goa's full electronic music peak, with Martin Garrix, Armin van Buuren and Dimitri Vegas regulars.
Where camels dance and the desert sings
The Ship of the Desert takes centre stage — camel races, dance contests, best-decorated camel competitions, and a fur-cutting art display where shaved patterns become living sculptures.
The sky over Ahmedabad goes technicolor
On Makar Sankranti, the sky above Ahmedabad fills with tens of thousands of kites as rooftops across Gujarat compete to cut each other's lines. International kite masters join from 40+ countries.
The harvest bonfire of Punjab
Families gather around a bonfire at dusk, throwing in sesame seeds, jaggery, popcorn and groundnuts while circling it. Bhangra dhol picks up, Dulla Bhatti folk tales are sung, and revdis (sesame-jaggery brittle) are shared across neighbourhoods.
Tamil Nadu's four-day harvest thanksgiving
The state's most important festival. Rice is boiled until it overflows the clay pot — the auspicious 'pongal-o-pongal' moment — families draw kolams at their doorsteps, and cattle are bathed, painted and paraded on Mattu Pongal.
Assam's feasting-by-the-fire harvest
The harvest Bihu. Villagers build bamboo-thatch huts called Meji and Bhelaghar on riverbanks, spend the night feasting and singing, and at dawn burn the Meji as offering — sticky rice cakes toasted on the embers.
The world's largest free literary festival
Five days, 500+ speakers, 300,000 attendees — Nobel laureates to debut novelists share stages across the Diggi Palace lawns. Twelve-course curated thali lunches, Sufi music by night, and India's sharpest panel debates.
Three days of camels, music & the Thar dunes
Sam Sand Dunes come alive with turban-tying contests, Mr. Desert pageants, longest-moustache competitions, camel polo and fire-dancing under a full moon. Folk singers from the Manganiar and Langa communities perform at night.
India's only Portuguese-style carnival
Four days of floats, street parties, samba, and feasting in Panaji, Margao, Vasco and Mapusa. King Momo leads the Fat Saturday parade in a tradition dating to the 18th century.
Tibetan New Year in Dharamshala & Tawang
Monasteries across the Himalayas welcome the new year with Cham mask dances, butter-sculpture displays, and the Gutor ceremony where last year's demons are symbolically banished.
Classical Indian dance against temple backdrops
A week of classical dance — Kathak, Bharatanatyam, Odissi, Kuchipudi — performed under open skies in front of the UNESCO-listed Khajuraho temples. A dancer's pilgrimage.
The world's largest women's religious gathering
4 million women cook rice-jaggery pongala in clay pots on makeshift fires along every street of Thiruvananthapuram, surrounding the Attukal Bhagavathy temple in a 7 km ring — a Guinness-certified largest female gathering on earth.
Rishikesh — the world comes to the Ganges
A week of 70+ classes a day — asana, pranayama, kriya, meditation — taught by masters from across the world at Parmarth Niketan on the Ganges. Mornings open with Ganga Aarti; evenings close with satsangs and world music.
Mizoram's bamboo-dance spring festival
The Mizo community gathers in traditional puan to dance the Cheraw — the bamboo dance where couples hop in and out of clacking bamboo poles. Held after the jungles are cleared for jhum (slash-and-burn) farming.
The night of Shiva on the Kashi ghats
The holiest night for Shiva devotees. The Kashi Vishwanath temple stays open for 24 hours; sadhus from across India descend on the ghats; the four-watch night puja culminates at dawn with a Ganga dip.
The end of Ramadan in the City of Pearls
Lakhs gather for the pre-dawn Eid prayer at Mecca Masjid; the Charminar bazaars stay open all night in the days leading up, serving haleem and sheer khurma. Hyderabadi Eid is the country's most atmospheric.
The most authentic Holi in the world
The birthplace of Krishna celebrates Holi for over a week — Lathmar Holi at Barsana, Phoolon ki Holi (flower Holi) at Banke Bihari, Widow's Holi at Vrindavan — each a distinct ritual.
Goa's hidden spring festival
Goa's answer to Holi — but older, deeper and tribal. Float parades wind through Ponda and Bicholim, with farmers performing the ancient Romta Mel dance and throwing powder at sunrise.
The Sikh festival of warriors — Anandpur Sahib
Started by Guru Gobind Singh in 1701 as a martial alternative to Holi. Nihang Sikhs in blue-and-saffron display mock warfare, tent pegging, gatka sword-fencing and horse acrobatics across Anandpur Sahib for 3 days.
Asia's largest tulip garden in full bloom
1.7 million tulips in 68 varieties bloom across 30 hectares on the foothills of Zabarwan — Asia's biggest tulip garden. Open for only 2–3 weeks before the flowers wilt under the summer heat. Kashmiri pheran-clad folk performances daily.
New Year across the Deccan
Maharashtra raises the Gudi — a silk-draped bamboo pole with neem leaves and a copper pot — outside every home. In Karnataka and Andhra, families eat the Ugadi Pachadi: a six-taste dish representing life's full spectrum.
Punjab's harvest & Sikh New Year celebration
The wheat harvest, the birth of the Khalsa, and the Sikh New Year — all in one day. Golden Temple glows in its most elaborate decoration, Bhangra troupes perform in village fields, and langar serves hundreds of thousands.
Assam welcomes the New Year with dance
Seven days of Bihu dances, Husori processions through villages, bamboo construction of Meji bonfires, and communal feasting. The spirit festival of the Brahmaputra valley.
Kerala's golden new year
A dawn ritual — family elders wake you gently and lead you blindfolded to the Vishukkani: a tray of rice, golden laburnum flowers, yellow mango, Krishna idol and gold coins, lit by a single oil lamp. The first sight of the year must be auspicious.
The next Kumbh — on the banks of the Godavari
The great pilgrimage returns to Nashik and Trimbakeshwar in 2027. Tens of millions of sadhus and pilgrims converge at Ramkund and the source of the Godavari for three Shahi Snans (royal bathing dates) over a three-month window.
The Jyotirlinga-city Kumbh, once in 12 years
Ujjain's turn in the great rotating Kumbh. Pilgrims bathe at Ram Ghat on the Shipra river, and thousands gather at the Mahakaleshwar temple for the 4 AM Bhasma Aarti — the only one of its kind in India. Held when Jupiter enters Leo (Simha rashi).
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