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Tuesday, October 17, 2028 · 906 days away
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Diwali 2028
Event overview
Five-day Hindu festival of lights. Lakshmi Puja (the main day) falls on Tuesday October 17, 2028. The most important national festival in India. Lighting of oil lamps (diyas), fireworks, new clothes, sweets, family gatherings. Lakshmi Puja performed on the main night.
Diwali 2028, with Lakshmi Puja falling on Tuesday October 17, 2028 – an early Diwali year, with the festival pulled forward to the third week of October. The five-day arc runs from Sunday October 15 (Dhanteras) through Thursday October 19 (Bhai Dooj), observed by an estimated billion-plus people in India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and across the Indian diaspora.
Diwali, or Deepavali, is the most widely observed Hindu festival in the world and a public holiday in eleven countries. The festival's defining narrative is drawn from the Ramayana: after fourteen years of exile and the climactic battle in which Rama defeated Ravana, the people of Ayodhya welcomed their returning king and queen by lighting rows of oil lamps along every street and across every rooftop, until Ayodhya glowed brighter than the new-moon night sky.
Layered onto that story are several other regional accounts that fall on the same five days. In south India, Naraka Chaturdashi commemorates Krishna's defeat of the demon Narakasura at dawn; the predawn oil bath remains the day's central ritual in Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh. In western India, Vamana's sending of King Bali to the underworld is remembered. In Bengal, Diwali night becomes Kali Puja, the night-long worship of the goddess Kali. Jains commemorate Mahavira's nirvana on the same day; Sikhs observe Bandi Chhor Divas, marking Guru Hargobind's release from Gwalior Fort in 1619.
The festival's structural logic is clean: five days, four narratives, one new moon. Dhanteras opens with the worship of Dhanvantari (the divine physician) and the buying of gold and silver. Naraka Chaturdashi follows with the predawn oil bath. Lakshmi Puja is the main night. Govardhan Puja celebrates Krishna's lifting of the Govardhan hill. Bhai Dooj closes the festival with the sister-brother bond.
The home is the centre of Diwali. Every household is deep-cleaned in the days leading up; rangoli patterns are drawn at the front door each morning of the five days; new clothes are worn; gold, silver, and new utensils are purchased on Dhanteras. The night of Lakshmi Puja begins at dusk with the lighting of diyas at every door and window, followed by the family puja before an image of Lakshmi and Ganesh, often accompanied by the opening of new account books in Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Rajasthan. Fireworks – tempered in recent years by green-Diwali rules in many Indian cities – follow the puja.
Sweets are central. Kaju katli, besan ladoo, motichoor ladoo, gulab jamun, soan papdi, and barfi are exchanged across families and neighbours; savoury chakli, sev, namak para, and chivda balance the menu. In Tamil Nadu, the dawn breakfast is sweet idli or murukku with filter coffee; in Bengal, Kali Puja evening features khichuri and bhog. Major public Diwalis – the London Diwali on the South Bank, the Trafalgar Square celebration, Singapore's Little India illuminations, Leicester's annual switch-on, Sydney's Diwali in Parramatta – have become enduring civic events.
Diwali always falls on the new moon (Amavasya) of the Hindu month of Kartik. In 2028, Kartik Amavasya occurs on October 17, with the new moon present in the evening (Lakshmi Puja muhurat) – making Tuesday October 17 the universally observed Lakshmi Puja date. The date moves earlier each year because the lunar Hindu year is roughly eleven days shorter than the solar year, which is why Diwali fell on November 8 in 2026, October 29 in 2027, and now October 17 in 2028. The next major reset will come from an Adhik Maas (intercalary lunar month) inserted in a future year to re-align the calendar.
The full Hindu autumn arc lives at the Hindu festival hub. In 2028, Diwali follows Dussehra 2028 on September 27 and Navratri 2028 (September 19 – 27). For comparable festivals of light, see Hanukkah in the Jewish festival hub.
When is Diwali in 2028? Lakshmi Puja, the main day, falls on Tuesday October 17, 2028; the five-day festival runs October 15 to October 19.
How is Diwali observed? Through diya lighting, Lakshmi-Ganesh puja in the evening, fireworks, gift-giving, sweets, and family gatherings, with strong regional variants.
Is Diwali a public holiday? Yes, in India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, Fiji, Trinidad, Singapore, Malaysia, and Guyana.
What is the typical greeting? "Shubh Deepavali" or "Happy Diwali" – the longer "Diwali ki dher saari shubhkamnayein" is also common.
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