A crowd covered in pink and yellow powder at Banke Bihari temple, Vrindavan

Holi in Mathura: Where Krishna’s Colour Still Lingers

Forty days of flower-fights, turmeric, and divine mischief in the twin towns where Lord Krishna was born and fell in love. The most ancient Holi on earth.

YJ
YatraJunction Editorial
10 min read638 words

Holi is celebrated in a single day across most of India. In the Braj region of Uttar Pradesh — Mathura, Vrindavan, Barsana and Nandgaon — it lasts forty. This is the land where Lord Krishna was born, grew up, stole butter, teased gopis and flirted with Radha. The festival is not a splash of colour here. It is a love letter that reaches back 5,000 years.

The birthplace of Krishna: 5,000 years of colour and defiance

Mathura’s history begins before history has a name. The Mahabharata places Lord Krishna’s birth in a prison cell here, roughly 3228 BCE by traditional reckoning. By the time of the Kushan Empire (1st–3rd century CE), Mathura was one of the two capitals of a realm stretching from Central Asia to the Gangetic plains, and it produced some of the finest Buddhist and Hindu sculpture the world has ever seen — the “Mathura school” of art, whose red sandstone Buddhas now sit in museums from Delhi to London. Mahmud of Ghazni raided in 1018 CE and described Mathura as a city “with a thousand temples, each one surpassing the Kaaba in beauty.” He destroyed many; the city rebuilt.

The cycle of destruction and renewal repeated under the Delhi Sultanate and again under Aurangzeb, who demolished the grand Keshavadeva temple in 1670 and built the Shahi Idgah mosque on its plinth — a contested site to this day. But Mathura’s response was never military; it was cultural. The 16th-century poet-saint Chaitanya Mahaprabhu walked here from Bengal and reignited the Braj devotional movement, filling the streets with kirtan (song) and colour that no army could confiscate. That tradition is the direct ancestor of the Holi you see today at Banke Bihari — 5,000 years of colour thrown not in celebration of a single day, but in defiance of every century that tried to wash it away. A trip to nearby Agra completes the picture of Mughal-Braj coexistence.

The timeline of Braj ki Holi

  • Basant Panchami (late Jan / early Feb): The first official handful of gulal is thrown. Holi has begun.
  • Lathmar Holi at Barsana (9 days before main Holi): Women beat men with wooden sticks. The men carry shields and try not to giggle.
  • Phoolon wali Holi at Banke Bihari, Vrindavan (1 week before): 15 minutes of flower petals instead of colour. The most photographed 900 seconds in India.
  • Widow’s Holi at Gopinath Temple: Widows, traditionally forbidden from joy, play Holi since 2013 — a quiet social revolution.
  • Rangwali Holi: The main day. Complete chromatic chaos.

Where to stand, what to wear

At Banke Bihari Mandir, arrive by 8 a.m. — the temple closes for darshan at 11 and the crowd hits 40,000 by mid-morning. Wear white cotton you will never wear again. Buy herbal gulal from a trusted stall (the cheap synthetic dye stains skin for weeks). Leave your phone in a zip-lock bag — or better, leave it at the hotel. Some things are meant to be lived, not live-streamed.

Food only Braj can make

Holi is the one week of the year when every household in Mathura makes thandai — a cold milk drink pounded with almonds, fennel, rose petals and (sometimes) bhang. Ask, drink respectfully, and remember that the sacred intoxicant Lord Shiva favoured is not the same as a cocktail. Pair it with pedas from the original 1845 shop near Dwarkadhish Temple, or kachoris fried in pure ghee.

A larger pilgrimage

Many pilgrims thread Mathura into a bigger devotional route — the Taj Mahal at Agra (just one hour away), the ghats of Kashi, and the courtly Rajput palaces of Jaipur. If you have two weeks, you can trace a north-India arc that passes through four faiths, seven rivers and eighty-seven temples. Our travel guide lays out the practical logistics.

In Braj, Holi is not celebrated. It is continued.
A priest at Radha Raman Temple, Vrindavan
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YJ

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YatraJunction Editorial

Our editors are travellers, historians and food lovers who have collectively visited every state of India. Every guide is fact-checked, field-tested and updated with love.

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Frequently asked questions

When is Holi celebrated in Mathura and Vrindavan?
Braj ki Holi starts 40 days before the main Holi date (which falls in February or March). Lathmar Holi at Barsana is 9 days before, Phoolon wali Holi at Banke Bihari is about a week before, and Rangwali Holi on the main day.
Is it safe to play Holi in Mathura as a tourist?
Yes, but take precautions. Wear old white clothes, protect your eyes, use herbal gulal (not cheap synthetic dye), keep your phone in a zip-lock bag, and stay with a group. The crowds are exuberant but friendly.
How do I get to Mathura from Delhi?
Mathura is about 180 km from Delhi. The fastest option is the Gatimaan Express (under 2 hours). Taxis take 3–4 hours via the Yamuna Expressway. Vrindavan is 15 km further north from Mathura junction.

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