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Vesak / Buddha Purnima 2026
Event overview
UN-recognized Day of Vesak commemorates the birth, enlightenment, and parinirvana of Gautama Buddha; date varies by tradition (Theravada full moon May).
Vesak — also known as Buddha Purnima, Buddha Jayanti, Wesak, Visakha Bucha, and the United Nations International Day of Vesak — falling on the full-moon day of the Hindu lunisolar month of Vaisakha. In 2026 the principal Theravada observance falls on Friday 1 May 2026, with regional Mahayana and Vajrayana communities marking the day on adjoining nights of the same full-moon cycle. Vesak is the single most important holy day in the Buddhist calendar.
Vesak commemorates three central events in the life of Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, on the same full-moon day of Vaisakha: his birth at Lumbini in the year of the Sākyas, his enlightenment under the Bodhi tree at Bodh Gaya at age 35, and his final liberation (parinirvana) at Kushinagar at age 80. The triple-anniversary tradition is most strongly observed in Theravada countries — Sri Lanka, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos and the Buddhist diaspora — while Mahayana traditions in China, Korea, Vietnam, Taiwan and the Tibetan and Mongolian Vajrayana communities mark the same triad of events on different days within a broader observance window. The United Nations General Assembly resolved in December 1999 (Resolution 54/115) to internationally recognise Vesak Day as a UN observance; the principal annual UN celebration is hosted at UN Headquarters in New York and at the regional offices.
The 2026 calendar correspondence to Vaisakha Purnima differs by tradition: the Theravada calendar treats Vesak as Vaisakha Purnima ("the full moon of Vaisakha"); some Tibetan calendars locate the same observance on Saga Dawa Düchen, the full-moon day of the fourth Tibetan month. In India, Buddha Purnima is a national gazetted holiday and a major draw at Bodh Gaya, Sarnath, Kushinagar and Lumbini (across the Nepal border).
Vesak observance combines temple worship, dāna (almsgiving), sīla (precept-taking), bhāvanā (meditation), and devotional acts. Sri Lankan Vesak is famous for the lighting of paper lanterns (Vesak kūdu) and bamboo-and-cellophane pandals depicting Jataka tales, served alongside dansala — public food and drink stalls — across Colombo, Kandy and Galle. Thai Visakha Bucha includes the wian thian candlelit circumambulation of temple chedis. In Myanmar and Cambodia, communities pour scented water on the Bodhi tree. In Vietnam, Phật Đản features lantern-lit lake processions in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. The UN International Day of Vesak attracts heads of state, the Sangha, and academic delegations to host countries on a rotating basis. Many Buddhist organisations release birds, offer dana to the elderly, and donate blood as a contemporary form of the dana ideal.
The Sri Lankan Department of Buddhist Affairs, the Thai Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University, the Indian Ministry of Culture, the International Council for Day of Vesak (icdv.net), and the UN's information services publish the official multi-tradition calendars. Live broadcasts of the Day of Vesak ceremonies are carried by Sri Lanka Rupavahini, Thai PBS, Doordarshan, NHK, KBS and Vietnam Television. The Light of Asia and the Brahmajāla Sutta are commonly read in temples; the United Nations celebration includes the Tipitaka chanting and a global moment of meditation.
Vesak sits alongside the Buddhist festival hub, which consolidates the family calendar and connects Theravada, Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions. Other South Asian spring festivals to track include Holi 2027, Vaisakhi 2027, and Guru Nanak Jayanti 2026; the Sikh festival hub is at Sikh festival hub.
When is Vesak in 2026? Friday 1 May 2026 for the Theravada principal observance, with adjoining-day variations for Mahayana and Vajrayana communities. Where is Vesak observed? Across Sri Lanka, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, India, Nepal, Bhutan, Vietnam, China, Korea, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Mongolia, and the global Buddhist diaspora. Why does Vesak matter? It commemorates the birth, enlightenment and parinirvana of the Buddha and is the single most important holy day in the Buddhist calendar. Is Vesak a public holiday? Yes — in Sri Lanka, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, India, Nepal, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam and several other states, with one or two days of official observance.
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