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Countdown
Saturday, October 9, 2027 · 487 days away
Countdown
Dussehra 2027
Reminders
Event overview
Tenth and final day of Navratri marking the triumph of good over evil. Falls on Saturday October 9, 2027. Burning of effigies of Ravana, Meghnad and Kumbhakaran; Ramlila performances; Ayudha Puja in South India.
Confirmation checklist
Source trail
Primary source
en.wikipedia.org
Last reviewed
2026-04-30
Tracker status
scheduled
Date precision
Single-date event without a reliable public start time; date-first countdown only.
Schema posture
Event structured data is emitted because the record is single-date and scheduled or confirmed.
Primary citation
Freshness and review
Operational detail
Weak-date handling
Dussehra 2027 (Vijayadashami) – the climactic tenth day of Navratri – falls on Saturday October 9, 2027. The Saturday timing makes for a strong public-holiday weekend in India, and most Ramlila grounds plan their final-night Ravana effigy burnings around the evening of October 9.
Dussehra closes the Hindu autumn's longest narrative arc – nine nights of Durga's battle with the demon Mahishasura, and a 14-year exile that ends with Rama's defeat of Ravana – on a single day in which both myths land at the same victory. The Sanskrit name Dasha-hara means "remover of the ten" (Ravana's ten heads); the alternate name Vijayadashami means "the tenth day of victory."
Two narratives interweave. The first comes from the Ramayana: after Sita's abduction, Rama's army crosses to Lanka, defeats Ravana's forces, and on the tenth day of the campaign, Rama kills Ravana himself. The Ramlila tradition – nightly stage enactments running through the nine days of Navratri – culminates on Dussehra with the killing of Ravana on stage, immediately followed by the burning of giant Ravana effigies in the public grounds. The Ramlila of Ramnagar in Varanasi, performed continuously since the 1830s, is on UNESCO's list of intangible cultural heritage.
The second story comes from the Devi Mahatmya: the goddess Durga's nine-day battle with the buffalo demon Mahishasura, ending with her killing him on the tenth day. Bengal's Durga Puja closes on this date with the immersion (visarjan) of Durga idols in rivers and ponds; before the immersion, married women smear vermillion on each other (sindoor khela) and bid the goddess farewell with offerings of sweets.
The day's most visible ritual across north India is the Ravana effigy burning. Tall paper-and-bamboo effigies of Ravana, Kumbhakaran, and Meghnad – often 30 to 100 feet tall and stuffed with firecrackers – are erected at city-grade Ramlila grounds. At sunset, an actor playing Rama looses a symbolic arrow that ignites the fireworks inside, and the crowds watch the demons collapse in flame. The Delhi Ramlila Maidan, Lucknow's Aishbagh, and the Ramnagar Ramlila across the Ganges from Varanasi are the largest and most-attended.
In south India, Vijayadashami is the day of Ayudha Puja – the worship of one's tools, instruments, weapons, vehicles, and books. Carpenters worship their planes, musicians their instruments, drivers their vehicles, and students their textbooks. In Kerala, Vidyarambham is performed: small children are seated on the lap of an elder, who guides their finger through the syllables "Hari Sri Ganapataye Namah" written in rice or sand, marking their formal entry into learning.
In Mysuru, the city-organized Dasara culminates in the Jamboo Savari procession – a parade of caparisoned elephants carrying the goddess Chamundeshwari from Mysore Palace through the streets of the city. The 10-day Mysuru Dasara has been continuously observed since the Vijayanagara dynasty in the 14th century and was revived by the Wadiyars after Tipu Sultan's death.
Dussehra falls on the tenth day (Dashami) of the bright fortnight (Shukla Paksha) of the Hindu month of Ashvin. In 2027, Ashvin Shukla Dashami occurs on October 9 in Indian Standard Time, making Saturday October 9 the universally observed Vijayadashami date. Because the Hindu lunar year is roughly eleven days shorter than the solar year, Dussehra has shifted from October 20 in 2026 to October 9 in 2027 and will fall on September 27 in 2028.
Dussehra is the closing day of Navratri 2027 (September 30 – October 8) and opens the run-up to Karwa Chauth 2027 on October 18 and Diwali 2027 on October 29. The family overview is at the Hindu festival hub.
When is Dussehra in 2027? Vijayadashami falls on Saturday October 9, 2027.
How is Dussehra observed? Through Ravana effigy burnings, Ramlila enactments, Durga visarjan in Bengal, Ayudha Puja and Vidyarambham in south India, and Mysuru Dasara processions.
Is Dussehra a public holiday? Yes, in India and Nepal.
What is the typical greeting? "Shubh Vijayadashami" or "Happy Dussehra"; "Shubho Bijoya" in Bengal.
Date confidence
Dussehra 2027 is tracked as a scheduled event. The date is suitable for countdown and calendar use, while final logistics should still be checked against the linked source.
Source
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DussehraStructured data posture
This page emits Event structured data because the tracked record has a single scheduled or confirmed date. The linked source remains the final reference for time, venue, and operational changes.
Countdown evidence
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Date-first scheduled countdown
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6/10 record signals
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Held to date-first
Planning notes
Source reviewed Apr 30, 2026. The countdown record is intentionally labeled as scheduled or expected; use the source link and any range notes before treating the date as final.
Live values rendered at Jun 2, 12:03 PM UTC.
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